LOAN EXHIBITION OF 
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE 


AND THE 


DECORATIVE CRAFTS 





PARK SQUARE BUILDING 
BOSTON 


DECEMBER EIGHT TO TWENTY-NINE 
NINETEEN TWENTY-FIVE 


















































LOAN EXHIBITION OF 
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE AND 
THE DECORATIVE ARTS 


LOAN EXHIBITION OF 
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE 


AND THE 
DECORATIVE CRAFTS 


FOR THE BENEFIT OF 


FREE HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN 
BROOKLINE, MASS. 





HELD AT THE 
PARK SQUARE BUILDING 
DECEMBER EIGHT TO TWENTY-NINE 
1945 





ACKNOWLEDGMENT 


Tue Board of Trustees of the Hospital thank the Trustees of the 
Park Square Building for the use of the space devoted to the 
Exhibition; the Trustees of the Museum of Fine Arts for their generous 
cooperation; the Lecturers, for their assistance in adding to the 
educational value of the Exhibition; and all others who have 
generously given their support and services to make the Exhibition 
possible. 


THE WORKING COMMITTEE 


J. Love ty Littie, Chairman Mrs. Harry V. Lone 
Gorpon ALLEN Mrs. Joun LowE.i 

Won. SuMNER APPLETON Ne tson C. METCALF 
Rosert J. Clark Mrs. Georce W. Mitton 
Mrs. Epwarp B. CoLe Mrs. Rosert C. Morse 
Mrs. Howarp Cooney Cuauncy C. Nasu 

S. Prescott Fay Mrs. F. L. W. Richarpson 
GeorcE R. FEARING Henry D. SLEEPER 

Mrs. Georce R. FEARING Puitip L. SPALDING 
Ho.uts Frencu Mrs. Prerpont L. STACKPOLE 
Rapu W. Gray Cuar_es H. TyLer 

Epwin J. Hipxiss A. W. WELLINGTON 
Homer E. Keyes Epwarp C. WHEELER, JR. 


SUB-COMMITTEES 


Mrs. Gorpon ALLEN SHERWOOD ROLLINS 
Tuomas METcALr Mrs. Joun S. SpRING 
Mrs. Witi14M WHITMAN, JR. 


Pieces starred (*) are for sale and prices may be 
obtained from the Committee. 


= Boe 





THE following is a list of speakers, subjects and dates for the Lectures 
to be held in connection with the Loan Exhibition of Early American 
Furniture and the Decorative Crafts:— 


(1) Rev. Gtenn Tittey Morse of Newburyport, Mass. 
“Silhouettes” 
Tuesday, December 8 at 8.30 p.m. 


(2) Mrs. FLorence Pauty BERGER, 


General Curator, Wadsworth Atheneum and Morgan 
Memorial, Hartford, Conn. 


“Colonial Silver, Little Monuments of American History” 
Thursday, December 10 at 8.30 p.m. 


(3) Epwin J. Hipkiss, 


Curator in the department of Western oe Museum of 
Fine Arts, Boston, Mass. 


“American Furniture”’ 
Tuesday, December 15 at 8.30 p.m. 


(4) Homer E. Keyes, Editor of “‘ Antiques” 
“Antiques, Real and Imaginary” 
Thursday, December 17 at 8.30 p.m. 


(5) Georce Francis Dow of Topsfield, Mass. 
“Domestic Life in Seventeenth Century New England” 
Tuesday, December 22 at 8.30 P.M. 


(6) Burton J. Gates of Worcester, Mass. 
“New England Potting of the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries” 
Tuesday, December 29 at 8.30 p.m. 





FOREWORD 


@ ARLY American arts, produced for the most part during the 
Mad seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, reveal qualities of 

“) design and craftsmanship in simple objects sometimes over- 
looked in an eager search for the superlative — the things of 
great importance, or perhaps of great reputation. There is a double 
interest in their very simplicity and modest charm at their best: first, 
the appreciation of a cultural inheritance; and secondly, the hope that 
we may ring new changes on old themes and regain once more these 
minor arts — these arts of complete living. 

Although American work has a general character of its own, it was of 
course derived from styles across the sea: it simply carried on racial 
tradition. That usually means England, sometimes Holland and again 
some other country, some other race. And since our ties were strongly 
English, we see chairs in the style of Charles II, also many pieces in 
the style of the succeeding reign of William and Mary, and the forms 
in favor during the eighteenth century we simplified and made quite 
our own. 

One of the things making for a clearer understanding is the fact that 
seventeenth and eighteenth century pieces each had a setting grounded 
in separate architectural traditions. Our earlier houses were more akin 
to the smaller Gothic buildings of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries 
than to the great English houses of the seventeenth century. They were 
simply furnished, but the best of them were undoubtedly richer, more 
colorful, and more comfortable than is generally believed. There is 
evidence that the finest examples have been destroyed and we depend 
on old references and old inventories to gain an idea of their furnishings. 

Furniture of the seventeenth century is apt to leave an impression of 
crudeness with those who are not well acquainted with it. But when 
appropriate material, good design, and skillful making are combined 
in one piece we have something of a worthy order. Each age has its 
own way of expressing itself; we do some things well, in the seventeenth 
century they did things well in their own way. During both the seven- 





teenth and the eighteenth centuries there were many outlets for skill 
of hand and eye, for every one made things — nearly every one used 
tools. There was satisfaction and natural development in this old 
method of a personal handling, and the loss of it to modern work in 
the same field may account in some measure for the eager collecting of 
early American arts at the present time. 

Our early furniture, for example, was designed and made by craftsmen 
who were, to use a contemporary expression, “‘bred to the business.” A 
youth learning the craft served a long apprenticeship under articles with 
ai master and learned to think and to do in terms of what would be 
expected of him when he came to set up shop for himself. Furthermore, 
the tools and equipment necessary to make fine woodwork were such 
as the workman could make for himself, or with the assistance of his 
neighbor the smith. In short, he had control of his medium; and since 
furniture was usually made to order in small shops in both town and 
country, the patron was often in direct contact with the artisan, and 
he very likely understood ‘“‘the why of things.” The old artisans were 
not mere servile workers; for while their efforts were largely prosaic or 
practical, the decorative side was probably uppermost in the minds of 
both the worker and the patron. Within certain limitations and beyond 
the dry details of construction, there was some of the artist’s reverence 
and zeal for the mysteries of line and form, the relating of parts to the 
whole, a satisfying of the esthetic sense. 


Epwin J. Hipxiss 


CONTENTS 


LECTURERS. : ; avi 
FOREWORD. , : , meets 
FURNITURE. : : x vee 
SILVER . ; : ; mye PA 
PoRTRAITS : ; oA 
MINIATURES . ; ade 
VARS ORTRAITS .. , : aes 5U 
SILHOUETTES ’ wher | 
PRINTS *:, : . 34 
CLASS, , : : . Al 
PoTTERY ; , ; : . 0 
PEWTER é ; : . a es 
CHINA . : : ae 
TEXTILES eee. i ; wo 
Earty LicHTInc . : ‘ : eh aay: 
ADDENDA a ae ; : : ae 63 
PATRONS AND PATRONESSES ‘ ben Q5 
LENDERS : : mG 
DEALERS G é : eh U 


ADVERTISERS : : . . ; : See 





ILLUSTRATIONS 


Hicu Cuest or Drawers 
Pine CHEST 
ConneECTICUT CHEST 
THe WILLARD TANKARD 


THOMAS PERKINS 


Group oF THREE-SEcTION Mou.tp GLAss . 


Group oF EARLY AMERICAN POTTERY 
Group oF ConneEcTICUT PoTTERY 


CARPET OF EMBROIDERED WOooL 


14 
Vip) 
26 
42 
50 
a2 
60 





LOAN EXHIBITION OF 
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE AND 
THE DECORATIVE CRAFTS 





“1 


ne 


FURNITURE 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS, circa 1710 Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


With secret drawer. Six turned legs; original brasses intact. Formerly 
owned by Edward Holyoke, President of Harvard College, 1737-69. 


DESK BOX OF PINE, 1675-1700 Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


Friesland carving on front. 


SLAT-BACK ARMCHAIR Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


Interesting carved top, Spanish feet. 


SMALL CHEST OF OAK AND PINE, . 
Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
With two drawers. 


SHELF CLOCK Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Painted marbled decoration, pastoral scene on lower glass front. 
Maker, Aaron Willard 


DESK OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Serpentine front, with claw and ball feet. 

ARMCHAIR Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Bannister-back, with arch. 

CARD TABLE, Late Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 

SMALL SIDEBOARD OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. Herbert Browne 


Inlaid with rosewood. 3 ft., 6 in. long. 


10 SMALL CHEST OF OAK, Seventeenth Century 


Connecticut type. Center panel and arched niche. 1% in. mouldings. 


11 CHEST ON FRAME OF OAK, Seventeenth Century 


12 


“Pilgrim Chest,” with decoration of applied split turnings and turned 
stretchers. 


CONNECTICUT CHEST, Seventeenth Century 


With one drawer, cruciform side panels, arched center panel. 
Initials, E. B. 


[3] 


13 


14 


15 


16 


Lf 


18 


19 


20 


21 


fs 


23 


24 


to 
25 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS, circa 1700 
Walnut burl, six turned legs. 


CARVER CHAIR, Seventeenth Century : Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


With turnings. Originally owned by Stephen Vinal of Plymouth, and 
known as the “Jury Chair.” (Vinal’s mother came in the Mayflower.) 


SMALL RECTANGULAR CHAIR, 
Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


With serpentine edge, turned post of maple, on smaller rectangular base, 
with four legs. 


SMALL STAND, Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 
With 15 in. top on single turn. Butternut (?) post with crossed stretcher, 
notched feet. 


STAND OF PINE, Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


18 in. top, on crossed legs. 


STAND OF MAPLE, Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


18 in. top, on crossed feet. 


TWO-CANDLE WOODEN STAND, 
Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


Round post on circular oak base. Candle arm of large turnings held by 
thumbscrew. 4 ft., 4 in. high. 


DOUBLE CANDLESTICK OF MAPLE, 
Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


4 ft. high. 


DITTY BOX OF CAMPHOR WOOD, 
Early Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


7x 12x 634 in. 


DOUBLE CANDLE-STAND OF IRON AND BRASS, 
Early Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


On tripod, 5 ft. high. 


SMALL SINGLE CANDLE-STAND, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 
On tripod, 31 in. high. 


FIDDLE-BACK CHAIRS OF MAPLE, circa 1725 = Owner, Mr. Hermann F. Clarke 
With rush seat and Spanish feet. 


[4] 











o. 1 
H CHEST OF DRAWER 


S 


HIG 





26 


27 


28 


29 


30 


31 


32 


33 


34 


35 


36 


37 


38 


39 


40 


41 


CARVER ARMCHAIR Owner, Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Temple, Jr. 
Rush seat. 


CHEST OF PINE, circa 1700 Owner, Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Temple, Jr. 
Flemish scroll. With five legs, ball feet and scroll stretcher, 
Made and signed by Edmund Titcomb, Newbury, Massachusetts 


CHEST OF PINE AND OAK, circa 1700 Owner, Dr. and Mrs. W. F. Temple, Jr. 


Two drawers, 


CARVER SIDE-CHAIR, Seventeenth Century Owner, Dr. A. A. Cliff 
CHILD’S CORNER CHAIR Owner, Dr. A. A. Cliff 
HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS OF MAPLE Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


Acorn drops at base and cabriole legs. 


SMALL TRIPOD TABLE OF MAPLE Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 
Octagonal top. 


SLAT-BACK CHAIR OF MAPLE, 


Early Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 
LARGE MAPLE TABLE, Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 
With drop leaf, cabriole legs, ball and claw feet. 
QUEEN ANNE MIRROR, circa 1720 Owner, Rev. Abbott Peterson 
BIBLE BOX OF OAK, 1660 ‘ Owner, Rev. Abbott Peterson 


With paneled front. From Plymouth, 
SMALL PINE BOX Owner, Rev. Abbott Peterson 


With rounded lid, scratch carving and polychrome decoration. 


CARVER-BREWSTER CHAIR Owner, State Street Trust Co. 
From the tap-room of the Wayside Inn. 


CHEST OF PINE, 1680-1700 Owner, Mrs. Charles K. Bolton 


Polychrome decoration, notched lid. 
1650 Mouldings; found in Lunenburg, Mass. 


WASHSTAND OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. E. H. R. Revere 


Formerly belonged to Paul Revere. 


CHAIR, Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. E. H. R. Revere 


Belonged to Col. Richard Gridley, designer and builder of the fortifications 
at Bunker Hill, where he was wounded. 


[5] 


42 


43 


50 


Sl 


52 


53 


54 


55 


56 


57 


58 


BLOCK-FRONT BUREAU Owner, Mrs. J. Edward Brooks 


Original condition. 


COMB-BACK WINDSOR ARMCHAIR, 


Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. J. Edward Brooks 
TABLE CANDLE-STAND OF BRASS Owner, Mrs. J. Edward Brooks 
OPEN CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE Owner, Mrs. John C. Spring 


THREE STUFFED SIDE-CHAIRS 
OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 
Carving on back and legs, claw and ball feet. 


LOOKING GLASS, 1730 Owner, Mr. George H. Carter 
Japanned decoration in black and gold. ; 
4 ft.,7in. high; 1 ft., 1024 in. wide. Original glass. 


ARMCHAIR OF CARVED MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 
Stuffed seat, straight legs and stretchers. 


TILT TABLE OF INLAID WALNUT Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 
On tripod base. 


DESK OF CURLY MAPLE Owner, Miss Caroline Jewell 


LOOKING-GLASS STAND ON SERPENTINE 
FRAME Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 


With ivory inlay. 
“LOW-BOY” OF WALNUT Owner, Mr. James L. Huntington 
Herring bone design, bandy legs, painted feet, original brasses. Owned 
by Maj. Gen. Lincoln (1733-1810), ancestor of the present owner. 
CHILD’S DESK OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 


COURT CUPBOARD OF OAK AND PINE, circa 1650-80 


With black turnings and some of the original coloring. 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS 


Mid-eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Of walnut burl and curly maple. 
Cabriole legs and duck feet. 3414 in. wide, 56 in. high. 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Of amboyna burl and maple. 
Six legs with trumpet turnings, stretcher and turned feet. 


[6] 


. 
i~ 


59 


60 


61 


62 


63 


64 


65 


66 


67 


68 


69 


70 


71 


4 


CARD TABLE, Hepplewhite Period, 1780-90 


Inlaid top and legs, spade feet, drop leaves and one drawer. 


CARD TABLE, Hepplewhite Period, 1780-90 
Fruit wood. Nearly matching No. 59. 


SMALL BUTTERFLY TABLE OF MAPLE, 
Mid-eighteenth Century 
With round top, and straight legs. 3134 in. high. 


SMALL STAND OF OAK AND MAPLE, 


Seventeenth Century 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS OF 


CURLY MAPLE Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Paw feet. Bandy legs. 


BOWL OF WALNUT BURL 


23 in. in diameter. Two hand-holes. 


HADLEY CHEST WITH THREE DRAWERS, 1680-1700 


Simple carving, initialed T. S. Only one other three-drawer Hadley 


chest known. 


TAVERN TABLE 


Early design in pine and maple, with turned legs and stretchers. Top 


23 in. long, 17 in. wide. 


BUTTERFLY TABLE OF MAPLE 
op, 30x 35}2 in. Trestle feet. 


TRESTLE GATE-LEG TABLE, 1660-90 


“LOW-BOY” OF CHERRY 
With duck feet. Three drawers, 241% x 21 in. 


CORNER CABINET ON FRAME OF OAK 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 
With four raked, turned legs. 111% in. wide, 20% in. high. ~ 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 


Owner, Mrs. George R. 
Oval top, 341% x 4034 in. An early example of the use of cherry. 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Fearing 


Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 


AND PINE Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 


WINDSOR WRITING-CHAIR, 1750 
Office chair of Harrison Gray Otis. 


Owner, Mrs. Harrison Gray Otis 


SHERATON SOFA, Early Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 


Very small. Reeded legs. 


[7] 


73 


74 


75 


76 


oF 


78 


79 


80 


81 


82 


83 


84 


85 


86 


COCKED-HAT TABLE OF CHERRY, 
Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 


Three cornered, three bases, to hold cocked hat. 


CABINET OF CURLY MAPLE Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 
Glass doors, one drawer, duck feet, 5 ft.'x 25 in. 

CABINET OF MAPLE Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 
Similar to No. 74. No drawer. 

SMALL RUSH-STAND OF IRON Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
With four feet, decorated. 

IRON OIL-LAMP ON TRIPOD Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
For table use. 

VERY SMALL TABLE, 1660-80 Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Trestle base, turned trusses. 

SLAT-BACK ARMCHAIR, circa 1700 Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Maple with rush seat. Top of front posts enlarged to the shape of a 
mushroom. “Mushroom Chair.” 


SLAT-BACK ARMCHAIR, Late Seventeenth 


Century Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 

Three wide slats. Maple and beech, with rush’seat. 

CHILD’S PEN, “Jumper Chair” Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Painted pine, with tray. Turned raked legs. 

SLAT-BACK SLIPPER-CHAIR Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Rush seat, reinforced arms, maple legs. 

“LOW-BOY” OF BASSWOOD Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Heavy drops and ornaments. Four trumpet legs and ball feet, cross 
stretchers. 

SMALL STAND OF MAPLE Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


Cupboard below. 


WINDSOR CHAIR, Late Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Low back, with writing arm and drawer. Painted and in original 
condition. 

TABLE OF MAPLE Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


With square top, duck feet. 
[8] 


i} 
52 
1s 
: 
‘ 


. 





Re : s ij eee pe heee Se) 


* COT EA RME SERS AT Ser ER RAH: LENNON IIE A ROOTES 22 
é 


No. 27 


PINE CHEST — circa 1700 


one 





87 


88 
89 
90 


91 


92 


93 


94 


95 


96 


97 
to 
98 


99 


*100 


*101 


*102 


*103 


*104 


*105 


CHEST OF OAK ON FRAME, Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Two panels and one drawer. Pine top, 28x 1334 in. All turned legs. 


WINDSOR FOOT-STOOL, Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


PAIR LARGE TIN SCONCES 
PAIR OF SINGLE-MIRROR SCONCES 


FOOT STOOL OF PINE 
With hooked top. 


WING CHAIR OF WALNUT 


Queen Anne stretcher, claw and ball foot. 


PAIR PLAIN TIN SCONCES 


CORNER GATE-LEG TABLE 


FIRESIDE SETTLE OF PINE, circa 1780 
Seat 18 in. wide. 


BRANCH CHANDELIER, circa 1700 


Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Rare type. 
Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


Owner, Mrs. John C. Spring 


Owner, Mrs. John C. Spring 


Owner, Mrs. John C. Spring 


Center portion, a wood turning, 11 in. high, 6 in. wide, to which are 


nailed six sheet iron strips, 11 in. long. 


PAIR OF LADDER-BACK CHAIRS 
OF MAHOGANY 
With four open work rungs. 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS 
With‘ fine turned legs. 


Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 


CHILD’S “MUSHROOM” CHAIR OF MAPLE, 1710 


CHILD’S THREE-FEATHER HEPPLEWHITE ARMCHAIR 


DOLL’S HIGH FOUR-POSTER BED 


SEWING TABLE OF MAHOGANY, SATINWOOD INLAY, 


Sheraton Period 
With reeded legs. 


“LOW-BOY” OF WALNUT 


With three drawers. Turned _legs, flattened ball feet, scroll stretcher. 


CHILD’S HIGH CHAIR OF MAPLE 


Original rush seat. 


[9] 


*106 


aLOs 


*108 


*109 


*110 


cil 


hk 


*143 


*114 


"115 


*116 


S117; 


*118 


*119 


7120 


w121 


GATE-LEG TABLE OF MAPLE 
With oval top, and turned legs, 4 x 3 ft. 


SIDE CHAIRS OF MAHOGANY _ 
Stuffed, shield back and spade feet. 


CHIPPENDALE MIRROR 
Mahogany fretwork frame. Original glass, 54 x 20 in. 


“LOW-BOY” OF MAPLE, circa 1750 
Four drawers, bandy legs, duck feet. 


OAK CHEST, ONE-DRAWER TYPE, circa 1725 
Three panel design, pine top. (Original.) 


ROUND TABLE OF MAPLE 
One drawer, turned splayed legs, slide supports. 30 in. 


SECRETARY OF MAHOGANY AND SATINWOOD, circa 1800 
With glass doors. 


PAIR OF INLAID CARD-TABLES, circa 1770 


WING CHAIR 
With stretchers and duck feet. 


HUTCH TABLE, circa 1700 
With round pine top and pine base. 


CHILD’S HUTCH CHAIR AND SCHOOL DESK, Early Eighteenth Century 
Of pine. 


SLAT—BACK ARMCHAIR OF MAPLE AND CHESTNUT 


Sausage turnings. 


CARVER CHAIR OF CHESTNUT, Seventeenth Century 


New rush seat. 
WINDSOR COMB-BACK ARM ROCKING CHAIR, circa 1750 


SIDE CHAIR OF MAHOGANY 
Stuffed, with shield back, moulded leg. 


SIDE CHAIR OF MAHOGANY 
Sheraton back, stuffed; moulded leg. 


[10] 


*122 TWO TIN CHANDELIERS 


Twelve candles. 


*123 QUEEN ANNE MIRROR 
With gilt shell. 


*124 PIPE RACK OF PINE, Seventeenth Century 
*125  BLOCK—FRONT BUREAU 


Four drawers. 


*126 FOUR-POSTER BEDSTEAD OF MAHOGANY 
With original canopy and tester. 


*127  CANDLESTICK OF BRASS AND IRON 
5 feet high. 


#128 BULL’S-EYE LANTERN 
With original glass. 


#129 DRESSER OF PINE 


Shelves above, drawers and cupboard below, with guards and spoon holes. 


*130 DRESSER OF PINE 


Plain shelves above, cupboard below. 


Fioie pot 1 LY BOX 
With oval, carved top. 


fiose ABLE OF MAPLE 
With round top, 26 in. in diameter, bandy legs and duck feet. 


*133 CHEST OF DRAWERS OF CHERRY AND PINE 
With serpentine front and Goddard feet. 


*134 SERPENTINE MIRROR-STAND OF MAHOGANY 
With three drawers. 


*135 SMALL STAND 
With 15 in. round maple top, turned post with crossed trestle feet. 


*136 TAVERN TABLES OF MAPLE 


to With oval top and turned leg. 
*137 


*138 DESK OF MAHOGANY 


Serpentine front, claw feet. 


[11] 


*139 SHERATON WORK-TABLE OF MAHOGANY 
With cloth bag and one drawer. 


*140 CHEST OF MAPLE, Hadley type, circa 1700 
With two drawers, pine top, three panels, turned legs. 


*141 FIRE SCREEN ON TRIPOD, circa 1780 
Needlework. 


*142. CHIPPENDALE FRETWORK MIRROR, circa 1750-70 
With‘ gilt bird. 
*143 HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS OF MAPLE, circa 1770 


Bonnet top with original flame, acorns, and brasses. 


*144 TABLE OF PINE AND MAPLE, circa 1750 
With one drawer, bandy legs, and duck feet. 


*145 GATE-LEG TABLE, circa 1750 
Oval top, 55 x 66 in. 


*146 BUREAU OF MAPLE, circa 1750 


Four drawers, duck feet. 


*147 JACOBEAN TABLE OF MAPLE AND PINE, circa 1680 


With two drawers and turned center stretcher. 


*148 CARD TABLE OF INLAID MAHOGANY 
Reeded legs. 


*149 HEPPLEWHITE SIDEBOARD OF INLAID MAHOGANY 
With six tapering legs. 


*150 HALL CLOCK OF INLAID MAHOGANY 


Engraved brass dial. 
Maker, George Meridith of Germantown, Pa. 


*151 CHEST ON CHEST OF MAPLE 
Duck feet. 


*152 CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE 


*153 BLOCK-FRONT GODDARD CHEST 
Three drawers, shell top, ball feet. 


*154 BLOCK-FRONT CHEST OF DRAWERS OF MAHOGANY 


Four drawers, bracket feet. 


[12] 


i. 


*155 BANNISTER-BACK SIDE-CHAIR 


Turned legs, rush seat. 
*156 SET OF SIX DUNCAN PHYFFE DINING-CHAIRS 
*157 CHILD’S PEN OF PAINTED PINE, “Jumper Chair” 


*158 BUREAU, SATINWOOD FRONT, Late Eighteenth Century 


Four drawers, reeded columns at corner. 


*159 WINDSOR SIDE-CHAIR 


Braced back, turnings on spindles. 


*160 GATE-LEG TABLE OF MAPLE, Early Eighteenth Century 
Rectangular top and drop leaf. 


*161 CONNECTICUT CHEST, 1650-90 


Pine top, one drawer. In original unrestored condition 
*162 PIPE RACK OF PINE 


*163 CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE, Early Eighteenth Century 


Scroll front restored, remainder original 


*164 SWELL-FRONT DESK OF PAINTED MAPLE, Late Eighteenth Century 


Four claw feet. 


*165 SLAT—-BACK ARMCHAIR, Early Eighteenth Century 


Four scrolled slats, sausage turnings on front stretcher; all pine. 


*166 BANNISTER-BACK ARMCHAIR OF PINE 
With rush seat. 


*167 SMALL BOX OF PINE 
With drawer. 


*168 CHILD’S DESK, Late Eighteenth Century 
Crudely painted pine; 18 x 12% in. 


*169 CRADLE OF PINE 


*170 HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS OF WALNUT BURL 


Herring bone inlay, six trumpet turned legs, butterfly brasses. 


*171 TALL CLOCK IN MAPLE CASE, circa 1800 


[13 ] 


made 
to 


= BS 
*174 
5175 
*176 


Tayi 
to 
*179 


*180 


*181 


*182 


*183 


184 


*185 


186 


187 


188 


189 


190 


191 


CROMWELLIAN SIDE-CHAIRS OF OAK 
With leather seats (from the Waters’ collection). 


MINIATURE CHILD’S DESK OF PINE 
CARVED MANTEL, Early Eighteenth Century 
MANTEL, COLONIAL PERIOD 

THREE CARVED MANTELS 


CHEST OF PINE, Seventeenth Century 


Painted green. 
SETTEE, WINDSOR PERIOD 


CORNER CUPBOARD 
With scalloped top. 


DESK OF WALNUT 


Block front, knee hole, six claw and ball feet. Formerly owned by Gen. 
Schuyler. 


IRON TRIPOD FIRE-SCREEN Owner, Mr. Wallace Nutting 
CONNECTICUT CHEST OF PINE AND OAK Owner, Mr. Charles H. Parker 


MIRROR OF MAHOGANY AND GILT, 
Late Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


Eagle top, with an emblem in oval at the bottom. 


CONNECTICUT CHEST S¢< 


With sunflower decoration. Owner, Mr. Henry Ford -=~ 
BUTTERFLY TABLE Owner, Mr. Henry Ford 
TABLE WITH OVAL TOP | Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 

Two turned stretchers and posts, trestle feet. 

BIBLE STAND OF MAPLE Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 

With cross trestle feet. 

CANDLE STAND OF OAK AND MAPLE Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 
_ With T foot. 


[14] 





No. 187 
CONNECTICUT CHEST 


w 





192 


193 


194 


195 


196 


197 


198 


199 


200 


201 


202 


203 


204 


205 


PAINTED CHEST OF PINE, dated 1731 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 


With one drawer. 


CHEST OF PINE, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 


With two drawers, panel front, original coloring. 


MINIATURE CHEST, dated 1729 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 
With four drawers. Made in Taunton. 


CHEST, HADLEY TYPE, circa 1670 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 


With three carved panels, no drawers. 


“MARTHA WASHINGTON” ARMCHAIR OF 
MAHOGANY, circa 1750 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 


SMALL PAINTED CHEST OF DRAWERS, 


circa 1730 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 
With turned feet. 


CHAISE LONGUE OF MAPLE Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 
With Spanish feet. 


TALL CLOCK OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. William H. Mayo 
Maker, Aaron Willard 


GATE-LEG TABLE OF ASH AND PINE Owner, Mrs. Downing Brown 
Double stretcher; oval top, 30 x 36 in. ; 


SMALL DESK OF MAPLE Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


With interesting interior; cabriole legs. 


SHAVING MIRROR OF MAHOGANY, circa 1790 Owner, Mr. G. Winthrop Brown 
Shield-shaped glass. 


CHEST OF DRAWERS OF MAHOGANY, 


circa 1760 Owner, Mr. G. Winthrop Brown 
Block front. 


WRITING BOX OF CHERRY Owner, Mr. G. Winthrop Brown 
Eighteenth Century. Slant top lid. 


TILT-TOP TABLE OF MAHOGANY, 
circa 1780 Owner, Mr. G. Winthrop Brown 
Shaped top with molded edge, tripod base. 


[15] 


206 


207 


to 


208 


209 


210 


211 


=2t2 


213 


214 


215 


216 


217 


218 


219 


220 


221 


“LOW-BOY” OF MAHOGANY, circa 1760 
Richly carved, Philadelphia school. 


PAIR OF SQUARE TABLES OF MAPLE Owner, Mr. G. Winthrop Brown 
Molded tops, turned legs, duck feet. 


HANGING CRADLE, circa 1760 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
With trestle foot. 


CANDLE STAND, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
With cross foot. 


VERY SMALL TAVERN TABLE OF PINE AND 


MAPLE, circa 1750 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
BUREAU OF MAHOGANY, circa 1770 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
Serpentine front, claw and ball feet. 
CANDLE STAND, circa 1760 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
With taper drawer. 
ROUNDABOUT CHAIR, circa 1750 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
SMALL GATE-LEG TABLE, Late Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Oak and maple frame, oval pine top, 32 x 35 in. Vy nore. 
TAVERN-TYPE TABLE OF MAPLE, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Oval top, 23 x 30 in., turned legs, one drawer. 


LARGE BUTTERFLY TABLE OF MAPLE, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Rectangular top, 34 x 38 in., with scroll corner, turned legs. 


SMALL TRIPOD TILT-TABLE OF MAHOGANY, 
Sheraton Period Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Octagonal inlaid top, vase pattern post with Sheraton legs and spade feet. 


IRON CANDLESTICK Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


With brass trimmings. 
Made and signed “B. Gerrish, 1736.” 


FIDDLE-BACK ARMCHAIR OF MAPLE, 
Mid-eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Carved arms, rush seat, turned legs and spindles. 


CONNECTICUT CHEST, Late Seventeenth Century Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Oak, with maple turnings, pine top, one row of drawers. 
Original coloring. 


[16] 


222 


223 


224 


229 


226 


227 


228 


229 


230 


231 


232 


233 
to 
234 


235 


236 


to 
237 


OAK CANDLESTICK, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
With double trestle base, single light. 


SMALL TRIPOD TILT-TABLE Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Oval inlaid top, tiny drawer below, vase turned post. 


WING CHAIR WITH NEEDLEPOINT, 
Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 
Claw and ball foot. Formerly owned by Gov. William Dummer. 


CARD TABLE OF MAHOGANY, 
Eighteenth Century Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 


Oval needlepoint top, 22 x 24 in., with claw and ball feet. Formerly 
owned by Gov. William Dummer. 


SIDE CHAIR OF MAHOGANY, circa 1800 Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 


TRIPOD TILT-TABLE OF MAHOGANY, circa 1790 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Chippendale type. “Pie crust” top, carved post, cabriole legs and 
claw feet. 


SLAT-BACK ARMCHAIR, circa 1690 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Rush seat, posts topped with flattened ball. “Mushroom chair.” 


SLAT-BACK SIDE CHAIR, Early egies Century 


Pine, with rush seat. 


FIDDLE-BACK ARMCHAIR, Mid-eighteenth Century | Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Rush seat. 


CANDLE BOX OF OAK, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


CHILD’S CHAIR OF OAK AND MAPLE, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Bannister back, rush seat, Spanish feet. Only known instance of a 
spiralled open-work rung in an American chair. 


PAIR LIGHT MAPLE SIDE-CHAIRS Owner, Dr. and Mrs. Charles J. White 
Spanish feet, rush seat. 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS 
OF WALNUT Owner, Dr. and Mrs. Charles J. White 
Six turned legs. 


TWO CARD-TABLES OF INLAID 


MAHOGANY Owner, Dr. and Mrs. Charles J. White 
Kidney shaped. 


[17] 


238 


239 
to 
240 


241 
to 
242 


243 


244 
245 


246 


247 


248 


249 


250 


251 


20% 


253 


254 


255 


256 


257 


“LOW-BOY” OF WALNUT 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 


Bandy legs, carved shell on knees, claw and ball feet. 


WALL STOOLS OF WALNUT 
With tops of needlepoint. 


PAIR SHERATON BACK SIDE-CHAIRS 
With stuffed seat. 


CARD TABLE OF WHITE MAHOGANY 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs 


One drawer, bandy legs, shells on shoulders, carved duck feet. 


CARD TABLE OF INLAID MAHOGANY 
DINING TABLE OF MAHOGANY 


Center post, four brass claw feet. 


WALL TABLE OF MAHOGANY 
One drawer, bandy legs, duck feet. 


BLOCK-FRONT INLAID WORK-TABLE 


BUREAU OF MAHOGANY 


Serpentine front, claw and ball feet. 
TRESTLE TABLE, 1650-80 
EARLY STAND OF PINE, 1670-90 
VERY EARLY TAVERN TABLE, 1640-80 


CANDLE STAND, 1690-1720 
With adjustable bar and round table. 


CANDLE STAND, 1700-30 
Very good turnings and base. 


HANGING ADJUSTABLE CANDLE- 
HOLDER OF IRON 


CANDLE STAND, 1690-1710 
HANGING OIL LAMP 
SEWING CANDLE STAND, 1690-1700 


[18] 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 
Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 


Owner, Dr. and Mrs. 


Charles J. White 


Charles J. White 


. Charles J. White 


Charles J. White 
Charles J. White 


Charles J. White 


Charles J. White 


Charles J. White 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


258 


259 


260 


261 


262 


263 


264 


265 


266 


267 


268 


269 


270 


271 


272 


273 


TABLE STAND FOR BETTY LAMP 
| OF PINE Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE, circa 1740 | Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


SHERATON WORK-TABLE, 1800-10 Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Of delicate proportions, with landscape decorations on top, sides, and 
back. 


DAY BED, circa 1690 Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Vase and ring turnings, fine cresting. This piece was owned by an 
Ipswich family for over two hundred years. 


SLAT-BACK ARMCHAIR, Pilgrim type, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 


Heavy turned posts, and old rush seat. 


TABLE OF MAPLE, circa 1725 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 


Oval top, turned legs, and crossed stretchers. 


DESK OF MAPLE, circa 1750 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 


With slanting lid, on a two-drawer stand with turned legs. 
CHILD’S CARVER ARMCHAIR OF ASH, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 
ROCKING SETTLE OF PINE, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 


SLAT-BACK ARMCHAIR, circa 1750 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 
With rush seat. 


SLAT-BACK “MUSHROOM” CHAIR, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. B. A. Behrend 


CHEST OF OAK AND PINE 


With four drawers, flattened turned feet, original coloring. 


HADLEY CHEST OF OAK, 1690 Owner, Mr. Philip L. Spalding 


Two-drawer type with tulip carving, and name, “Elizabeth Warner.” 


DESK OF PINE, 1725 Owner, Mr. Philip L. Spalding 


On turned oak frame. 


WORK TABLE OF MAHOGANY, circa 1770 Owner, Mr. Dudley Pickman 
Inlaid rectangular top and tapered legs. 


BLOCK-FRONT CHILD’S DESK 
OF SAN DOMINGO MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. Dudley Pickman 
With three drawers. 


[19] 


274 


275 


276 


277 


* 278 


SIDE CHAIR, TRANSITION TYPE Owner, Mr, Dudley Pickman 


With three slats, and one turning in back. Rush seat. 


MIRROR WITH FRAME OF MAHOGANY 
AND GOLD Owner, Mr. Edward C. Adam 
4 ft., 2 in. high by 2 ft., 3 in. wide. 


CHILD’S BUREAU Owner, Mrs. Henry G. Vaughan 
18 in. high, 22 in. wide. 

CHILD’S HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS Owner, Mrs. Henry G. Vaughan 
32 in. high, 19 in. wide. 

DAY BED, 1690 ‘| ' 


[20] 


SILVER 


CHURCH SILVER—Owner, The First Church, Boston 


281 TWO CHALICES 


to Plain bowl and base, baluster stem. 


282 Gift of John Oxenbridge. 
Maker, Hull & Sanderson, 1624-83 


283 TWO CHALICES 
to Lower part of bowl spirally fluted, baluster stem, gadrooning on the back. 
284 Maker, J. Dummer, 1645-1718 


285 COVERED TANKARD 


Double twisted thumb piece, shield with small bosses on handle. 
Gift of Samuel More, 1717. 


Maker, Jeremiah Dummer, 1645-1718 


286 TANKARD 
Flat top, serrated edges, angel’s mask on handle. 
Maker, John Cony, 1655-1722 


287 FLAGON 
Cusped thumb pieces, engraved Dummer arms. 
Maker, John Edwards, 1670-1746 


288 BAPTISMAL BASIN 


Engraved Byfield arms. Diameter 1354 in. 
Maker, Jacob Hurd, 1702-58 


289 TWO ALMS BASINS 


to Diameter 13 in. 


290 Gift of Suviah Thayer. 
Maker, Paul Revere, 1735-1818 


291 GOVERNOR WINTHROP CUP, 1610-11 
The gift of John Winthrop to the First Church of Boston. Of English 


make. 


292 TEASPOON Owner, Mr. James L. Huntington 
Bright cut decoration. Initials (Mary and Benjamin Lincoln), 1733-1810. 


Maker, Paul Revere 


[21] 


293 


294 


295 


296 


to 


298 


299 


300 


301 


302 


303 
to 


307 


308 


309 


310 


EARLY ENGLISH CAN, 1740 Owner, Mrs. Atherton Noyes 


Made for Peter Faneuil. With Faneuil coat of arms. 


TANKARD Owner, Mr. Philip L. Spalding 
6% in. high, dome cover, finial, midband, single scroll handle. 
Engraved and presented to Joseph Willard of Harvard College in 1766. 
Maker, Samuel Minott, 1732-1803 
CUP Owner, Mr. Philip L. Spalding 
47% in. high, 334 in. in diameter. 
Round bottom, engraved “Harwich Cup.” 
Maker, John Dixwell, Boston, 1680-1725 
MONTEITH AND PAIR OF WINE COOLERS Owner, Mrs. J. Grafton Minot 


Owned by Gov. Bowdoin, descending through his daughter, Lady 
Temple, to her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Winthrop, great grandmother 
of the present owner. 


COFFEE URN OF COPPER Owner, Mr. Herbert Brown 


With silver mountings. 
PAIR OF SHEFFIELD PLATE CANDLESTICKS Owner, Mr. Herbert Brown 


SILVER TANKARD, circa 1725 Owner, Mr. Winslow Warren 


Winslow coat of arms. 8% in. high. Given in 1725 by Isaac Winslow, 
grandson of Gov. Edward Winslow, to his daughter Penelope on her 
marriage to James Warren. 


MUG Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Flat bottom and single scroll handle. 
Maker, Zachariah Brigden, Boston, 1734-87 


FIVE SILVER TEASPOONS Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 
Maker, S. Drowne 


COVERED TANKARD Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 
With fluted bottom on pedestal, known as the “Quincytankard.” 


TEASPOON, “Liberty Spoon”’ 
Design of bird and cage, “TI love liberty.” 
Maker, Paul Revere 


TANKARD Owner, Mr. Sherwood Rollins 
Dome top with finial. Engraved T. A. 
Maker, Samuel Minott, 1732-1803 


[ 22 ] 





No. 294 


THE WILLARD TANKARD 





311 


312 


313 


314 


*315 


*316 


git 


318 


319 
to 
SPP 


323 


324 


325 


326 


BASKET, circa 1780 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Maker, Paul Revere, 1735-1818 
SKEWER Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
With shell near handle. 
Probably made by Joseph Smith, Boston, d. 1789 


LADLE, circa 1780 
Maker, Paul Revere, 1735-1818 
TABLESPOON, circa 1780 


Worn by use in the Revere family. 
Maker, Paul Revere, 1735-1818 


PORRINGER 
5 in. in diameter. 
Maker, Samuel Minott, 1732-1803 
CREAM PITCHER 


Double scroll handle, three legs. 
Maker, Samuel Minott, 1732-1803 


CAN, circa 1750 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Scroll handle, marked T. S. 


CREAM JUG, circa 1780 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Maker, Thomas Hammersley, New York 


FOUR PIECES UNMARKED SILVER, circa 1800 Owner, Mrs. Joseph Woods 
Tea Por Sucar Bow. 
Cream Juc Bowt 


Set of ornate design, bright cut engraving and ball feet. Engraved 
H. L. with Livingston crest and motto. It was a part of the wedding 
silver of Mrs. William M. Smith (Helen M. Livingston). 


TANKARD), circa 1700 Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 


6 in. high, flat top. © 
Maker, Jeremiah Dummer, 1645-1718 


TEA POT, circa 1800 Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 
Oval fluted body, wooden handle, ball feet. 
Maker, William Holten 
WATER PITCHER, circa 1800 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Vase body, flat bottom, single handle and rope edging. Unmarked. 


BEAKER CUP Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


With ribbon handle. 
Maker, Zachariah Brigden, 1734-87 


[23 ] 


327 


328 


329 


330 


331 


332 


333 


334 


*335 


PITCHER 
Maker, Paul Revere, 1735-1818 


BELL Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Octagonal handle. 
Maker, John Burt, Boston, 1691-1745 
CREAM JUG Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
With cover. 
Maker, Jacob Hurd, Boston, 1702-58 
SNUFFER AND TRAY Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
Maker, John Burt, Boston, 1702-58 
CASTER, 1730 Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
With floriated cypher thereon. 
Maker, John Hastia, New York 
CAN Owner, Mr. Hermann F. Clarke 
At some time, property of Second Presbyterian Church, Newburyport, 
Massachusetts. 
Maker, Edward Winslow, 1669-1753 
CREAM JUG, circa 1770 Owner, Dr. and Mrs. Charles J. White 
Engraved H. K. 
Maker, William Homes, 1717-83 
LADLE Mr. Henry D. Sleeper 


12 in. long, with fluted bowl. 
Marked ‘“‘ Revere”’ 


SILVER BRAZIER WITH HANDLE OF WOOD 
Maker, John Coney, 1655-1722 


[ 24 ] 


; 
\ 


341 


342 


343 


344 


345 
— 


PORTRAITS 


THE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF THE FIRST FIVE PRESIDENTS 
BY GILBERT STUART (1755-1828) 


PRESIDENT WASHINGTON, painted circa 1790 Owner, Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge 
PRESIDENT JOHN ADAMS, painted circa 1800 Owner, Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge 


PRESIDENT THOMAS JEFFERSON, 
painted circa 1804 Owner, Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge 


PRESIDENT JAMES MADISON, 
painted circa 1808 Owner, Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge 


PRESIDENT JAMES MONROE, 
sat to Stuart in Boston, 1817 Owner, Mr. T. Jefferson Coolidge 


A second set of portraits of the first five presidents, painted by Stuart, was destroyed by fire 
in the library at Washington, 


346 


347 


348 


349 


350 


351 


DR. GEORGE SHATTUCK Owner, Mr, F. C. Shattuck 
By Gilbert Stuart 


MRS. CALEB DAVIS (Eleanor Cheever) Owner, Mr. F. C. Shattuck 
(Mrs. John Derby.) Painted before 1820. 
By Gilbert Stuart 


CAPT. JOHN DERBY Owner, Mr. F. C, Shattuck 


Capt. Derby carried the news of the battle of Lexington to London in 
the ““Quero.”” To the back of the portrait is pasted Stuart’s receipted 
bill. Painted before 1820, 


By Gilbert Stuart 


THOMAS PERKINS, 1807 Owner, Miss Helen Loring 
By Gilbert Stuart 


BOY AND GIRL Owner, Miss Helen Loring 
Attributed to Swibert 


SAMUEL HARVEY HOWARD Owner, Mr. George R. Fearing 
Master of the Rolls; Anne Arundel Co., Md. 
By Charles Wilson Peale, 1741-1827 


[25] 


352 


353 


354 


355 


356 


357 


358 


359 


360 


*361 


362 


363 


364 


365 


MRS. SAMUEL MOALE (Anne Howard) Owner, Mr. George R. Fearing 
Daughter of Samuel H. Howard. 
By Rembrandt Peale, 1778-1860 


MRS. JOHN MOALE (Ellen North) Owner, Mr. George R. Fearing 


A water color. (She was the first white child born in Baltimore.) 


SAMUEL MOALE, of Baltimore Owner, Mr. George R. Fearing 


A water color. 


“MR. SHELDON” Owner, Mr. George R. Fearing 
By J. Johnson, 1773 


LEVI CANDY, circa 1795 Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 
A water color, 10% x 8% in. 


MRS. LEVI CANDY (Lucy Beers), circa 1795 Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 
A water color, 10% x 8% in. 


SAMUEL ROOT, circa 1810 Owner, Mrs. DeForest Danielson 
A water color, 614 x 8% in. 

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
A crayon. 


By Jean Baptiste Greuze, 1725-1805 


JOSEPH HALL, of Portsmouth Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 
A pastel. : 


Artist unknown 


COMMANDER LEWIS WARRINGTON 
By Rembrandt Peale, 1778-1860 


GEORGE CABOT Owner, Mrs. F. C. Shattuck 


A pastel. 
By Copley, 1737-1815 


PORTRAIT Owner, Mrs. Gordon Allen 


Ancestor of present owner. 
By Joseph Badger, 1708-65 


GEORGE DOWNING Owner, Harvard College 
Only known portrait of a graduate of the first class of Harvard College. 


Artist unknown 


SIR RICHARD SALTONSTALL Owner, Mrs. Richard M. Saltonstall 
By Rembrandt 


[ 26 ] 





No. 349 


THOMAS PERKINS 
By Gilbert Stuart 





366 


367 


368 


369° 


ISRAEL THORNDIKE, Painted circa 1820 Owner, Dr. Augustus Thorndike 
Of Beverly, great grandfather of present owner. 
By Gilbert Stuart 


MRS. ISRAEL THORNDIKE Owner, Mrs. Edward Burlingame Hill 
Painted circa 1820 


Sarah Dana, daughter of Rev. Joseph Dana and Mary (Turner) Dana; 
1780-1845. Married Israel Thorndike, Marblehead, 1818. 


By Gilbert Stuart 


REV. JOHN EMERSON (1670-1732), circa 1800 Owner, Mrs. Charles K. Bolton 


(Harvard 1689) Minister in Portsmouth. A copy, original painted in 
1708, now in New Orleans. 


PIERRE BOUCHER, 1680 Owner, Mrs. Charles K. Bolton 


First historian of New France. An original. 


[27 ] 


370 


ave 


o12 


373 


374 


375 


*376 


zaly 


378 


379 


MINIATURES 


THOMAS RUSSELL Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


A miniature, 
By Edwin Greene Malbone, 1777-1807 


MRS. JOHN LANGDON SULLIVAN Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
A miniature. Daughter of Thomas Russell. 
By Edwin Greene Malbone, 1777-1807 


MR. JOHN LANGDON SULLIVAN Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
A miniature. Son of Gov. James Sullivan, 1744-1802. 
By Edwin Greene Malbone, 1777-1807 


DANIEL RUSSELL Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing ~ 
A miniature. Son of Thomas Russell. 
By Edwin Greene Malbone, 1777-1807 


MINIATURE OF HARRY PRESCOTT, 
1804 Owner, Mrs. Katherine Tupper Prescott 
By Edwin Greene Malbone, 1777-1807 


PORTRAIT OF GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 
Enamel on copper. 
By William Birch 
ISAAC WEBB 


A miniature. An early educator of Woodstock, Conn. 
By Shumway (a pupil of Malbone) 


MR. WHITMAN OF BOSTON 


A miniature. 
By H. Williams 


JOHN SINGLETON COPLEY Owner, Mrs. Henry Copley Greene 
A miniature, 
By Copley, 1737-1815 
CALEB DAVIS Owner, Mr. Henry Shattuck 


A miniature. 
By Copley, 1737-1815 


[ 28 ] 


380 


381 


382 


383 


384 


385 


HENRY WARD PEARCE, Cecil Co., Md. Owner, Mrs. 


Robert Hale Bancroft 


A miniature. Great-great-grandfather of the present owner. 


By Raphael Peale, 1780 


BENJAMIN FRANCIS PEARCE Owner, Mrs 


A miniature. Son of Henry W. Pearce. 
By Raphael Peale, 1780 


JUDGE JOHN JONES MILLIGAN, 


of Wilmington, Del. Owner, Mrs. 


A miniature. 
By Trott, 1822 


MRS. JOHN JONES MILLIGAN, 


(Martha Levy, of Philadelphia) Owner, Mrs. 


A miniature. Granddaughter of Henry W. Pearce. 
By Trott, 1822 


ROBERT HALE IVES, of Beverly Owner, Mrs. 
A miniature. 
Artist unknown 
MR. ONION, of Maryland Owner, Mrs 


A miniature. 
Artist unknown 


[29] 


. Robert Hale Bancroft 


Robert Hale Bancroft 


Robert Hale Bancroft 


Robert Hale Bancroft 


. Robert Hale Bancroft 


386 
to 


388 


389 


390 


391 


392 


393 


394 


395 


396 


397 


WAX PORTRAITS 


FROM A COLLECTION OF ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY-TWO WAXES 
OWNED BY REV. GLENN TILLEY MORSE 


WAX PORTRAITS BY JOHN CHRISTIAN 
RAUSCHNER, Salem, 1819 


A Satem GENTLEMAN 
A Boy 
A Giri 


WAX PORTRAITS BY ROBERT BALL 
HUGHES, 1806-68 
Captain Benjamin Ricu or Boston 


BisHop SAMUEL WILBERFORCE 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Author of the “History of the Episcopal Church in America.” 


WAX PORTRAIT BY A. PERCY 


Hiram Bevis or New York 


WAX PORTRAIT BY G. C. 


Lapy 1n a Lace Cap 


WAX PORTRAIT 


Benjamin WEsT 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


American painter and President of Royal Academy, London, 1814. 


WAX PORTRAIT 
GENERAL James Wo tre, 1727-59 


WAX PORTRAIT BY G. ROUSE 


GeEorGE WASHINGTON 


WAX PORTRAIT BY GEORGE M. MILLER 


Dorotuy Paine Mapison 


Wife of President Madison. Damaged by heat. 


before 1812.) 


WAX PORTRAIT 


Unknown GENTLEMEN 
Probably by John Christian Rauschner. 


GEORGE WASHINGTON 


A wax portrait. 


[30] 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse — 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


(Supposed to be done 


Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


SILHOUETTES 


AMERICAN SILHOUETTES OF THE EIGHTEENTH AND EARLY 
NINETEENTH CENTURIES 


A representative group from the collection of over three thousand silhouettes belonging 
to the Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


398 SILHOUETTES BY WILLIAM KING, 
Salem, 1804 Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


HEAD OF AN OFFICER 
In helmet and queue. Stamped “King.” 


Mary WHEELOCK 
Stamped “W. King.” 


399" SILHOUETTES BY WILLIAM BACHE Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 
Rev. James Morse, 1779-1842 
Rector of St. Paul’s Church, Newburyport. Stamped “Bache’s Patent.” 


Dr. Joun APPLETON OF SALEM, September, 1808 
Stamped “Bache’s Patent.” 


Miss M. C. TurnER 
Painted on card. Signed “ Bache.” 


400 SILHOUETTES BY WILLIAM M. S. DOYLE, 
1769-1828 Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


James SUTHERLAND, b. 1766 
Hollow cut, backed with black paper. Signed “ Doyle.” 


MAN, WITH QUEUE 
Hollow cut, backed with black velvet. 


Woman In Cap 
Hollow cut, backed with black glass. 


401 ADVERTISEMENT FOR WILLIAM M. S. 
DOYLE, miniature and profile painter Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


By Abel Bowen, first wood-cut engraver in Boston, December 17, 1805. 


402 SILHOUETTES BY MOSES CHAPMAN, 
1782-1821, Danvers Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 
Setr Portrait, Profile in colors. 
Rey. Dr. Prince or SateM, Painted on paper. 
Woman’s Heap, Painted on paper. 
Man’s Heap, Hollow cut, backed with black paper. 
Man, wiTH QuevE, Cut out of white paper. 
Woman In Cap, Cut out of white paper. 


[31] 


403 


404 


405 


406 


407 


408 


409 


410 


411 


412 


413 


PRINTED ADVERTISEMENT Owner, Rev 
With two silhouettes. 


SILHOUETTE MACHINE USED BY MOSES 
CHAPMAN, 1782-1821 Owner, Rev 


SILHOUETTES BY G. MILES, 1804 Owner, Rev 
Boy, Full length, with hoop. Painted in black and gold. 
Girt, Full length, with hoop. Painted in black and gold. 


SILHOUETTES BY MASTER HUBARD Owner, Rev 


Fu_u Lenctu Man 
With long cape, and umbrella. Cut from black paper, mo 
pink card. Hubard label on back. 


Woman’s Heap 
Cut from black paper. Hubard stamp on back. 
SILHOUETTE BY PHILIP LORD OF 
NEWBURYPORT, 1814 Owner, Rev 


Mr. Town ey, or Boston 
Full length, cut out of black paper and lined with silver. 


. Glenn Tilley Morse 


. Glenn Tilley Morse 


. Glenn Tilley Morse 


. Glenn Tilley Morse 


unted on 


. Glenn Tilley Morse 


SILHOUETTES BY CHARLES WILSON PEALE Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Man’s Heap 
Hollow cut, stamped “Peale’s Museum.” 


Woman’s Heap 
Hollow cut, stamped “Peale’s Museum.” . 


SILHOUETTE BY SAMUEL METFORD, 


of Newport, R. I. Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Captain WILLIAM PARTLOW 


SILHOUETTES BY MASTER HANKER Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Davin Stanwoop, Gloucester, 1802. 

PaTIENCE STANWOOD, Gloucester, 1802. 

Cut out, Hanker labels on the backs. 
SILHOUETTE BY WILLIAMS 


GENTLEMAN WITH Lace RUFFLE 
Hollow cut, stamped “Williams.” 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


SILHOUETTE BY} DAY Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


SasuT1 L. STEVENS 
Painted in black and white, signed Day, facit. 


SILHOUETTE BY EVERETT HOWARD Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Evizasetu M. Howarp, Dover, N. H. 


[32] 


414 


415 


416 


417 


418 


SILHOUETTE OF CAPTAIN DAVID 
WOODWARD, 1796 Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Painted on card. 


SILHOUETTE OF MARY NEWHALL, b. 1786 Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Painted in dark brown, on glass and backed with silver. 


SILHOUETTE OF SUSAN ROACH, of Portsmouth, 
N. H., 1740 Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


SILHOUETTE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


In ink on glass. 


SILHOUETTE OF GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
On paper. 


[33 ] 


421 


422 


423 


424 


425 


426 


427 


428 


429 


430 


*431 


PRINTS 


BATTLE BETWEEN THE “UNITED STATES” 
AND THE ‘“MACEDONIAN,” circa 1815 Owner, Mr. Dudley Pickman 


Line engraving by Seymour, after Birch’s painting 
BOSTON HARBOR IN 1724 Owner, Mr. Herbert Lawton 
Colored engraving dedicated to Peter Faneuil. 
One of four known original colored engravings by Burgess. 
WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON Owner, Mr. E. R. Warren 


Broadside, New York, 1807. 
*‘Look on this and on this.” 


GENERAL JAMES WOLFE, circa 1760 Owner, Mr. George Francis Dow 


Mezzotint “H. Smith; C. Spooner, fecit.” 
Printed for J. Bowles & Son, at the Blackhorse, Cornhill, London. 


PORTRAIT OF GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mr. John T. Burnett 
With the arms of the Federal Government and the thirteen states. 
Engraved by Amos Doolittle, New Haven, 1794 


PORTRAIT OF JOHN ADAMS Owner, Mr. John T. Burnett 
With coats of arms of sixteen states. 
Engraved by Amos Doolittle, New Haven, 1799 


BATTLE OF BUNKER HILL Owner, Mr. John T. Burnett 
Engraved by J. Baker, 1832 
BATTLE OF LEXINGTON Owner, Mr. John T. Burnett 
Engraved by J. Baker, 1832 
COMMODORE HOPKINS, AUGUST 22d, 1776 Owner, Mr. John T. Burnett 
Mezzotint. 


Published by Thomas Hart 


U. S. FRIGATE CONSTITUTION Owner, Mr. Joseph Morrill 
Lithograph by Pendleton 


ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN THE BON 
HOMME RICHARD Owner, Mr. Harold S. Bradford 
Captain John Paul Jones, and H. M. S. SERAPIS, Captain Pearson 
Colored engraving, published Dec. 12, 1780, by John Boydell, London 


[34] 


432 


433 


434 


435 


436 


*437 


*438 


*439 


*440 


*441 


*442 


MAP OF THE COUNTRY AROUND BOSTON 
IN NEW ENGLAND, WITH A PLAN 
OF BOSTON AND CHARLESTOWN 


From a drawing made in 1771. 


MAP OF SOUTH AMERICA, about 1710 
By Herman Moll 


MAP OF THE DOMINIONS OF GREAT 
BRITAIN IN NORTH AMERICA 


Showing the New England coast. 
By Herman Moll, 1711 


PORTRAIT OF GEN. WASHINGTON 


Owner, Mr. Perry Walton 


Owner, Mr. Perry Walton 


Owner, Mr. Perry Walton 


Owner, Mr. Perry Walton 


From a painting made from life by N. Piehle in Philadelphia, 1783. 


French engraving. 


PORTRAIT OF THE MARQUIS LAFAYETTE 


Owner, Mr. Perry Walton 


Presented by Lafayette to Gen. Washington at the conclusion of the 


campaign in Virginia, in 1781. Engraving. 


MEMORIAL DESIGN TO MARY STEDMAN 
AND CAROLINE TILESTON 


Water color. 


ADMIRAL HOPKINS 
Mezzotint after Wilckenson. 
By Thomas Hart, London 


JOSEPH GREEN 
Stipple drawing in India ink; after Copley. 
CAMP MEETING OF THE METHODISTS 
IN NORTH AMERICA 


Aquatint in color after Milbert, 1919. 
By Debourg 


JOHN PIERCE 


Methodist Minister in Brookline. 


Lithograph after Sharp. 
ae By Goodrich 


LAFAYETTE IN 1781 


Line engraving after Le Payon. 
By Kearney, 1824 


[35 ] 


443 


445 


446 


447 


448 


449 


450 


451 


452 


453 


454 


PORTRAIT OF THE HON. JOHN HANCOCK, 
of Boston, in New England Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
President of the American Congress, from the original picture. Painted 


by Littleford. London, published 23d of October, 1775, by C. Shep- 


herd, mezzotint. 


ALEXANDER HAMILTON Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
Major-General of the Armies of Union States of America, Secretary of 
the Treasury, efc. Painted by Arch. Robertson. Engraved by William 
Rollinson, Line Engraved. 

THOMAS JEFFERSON Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
President of the United States. R. Peale, Pinx. C. Tiebout, sculptor. 
Line Engraved. 

GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
In 1772, at age of forty, painted by A. Dickinson. Engraved by J. W. 
Steele, from the original portrait by Charles Wilson Peale, mezzotint. 

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, LL.D. anp F.R.S. Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
Dr. Martin, Pinx. Engraved by Savage, mezzotint. 

JOHN QUINCY ADAMS Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
President of the United States, painted by Sully. Engraved by A. B. 
Durand. Published October 6, 1826, by W. H. Morgan, Philadelphia. 
Line Engraved. 

JAMES MONROE Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
Painted by C. B. King. Engraved by Goodman & Pigot. Published 
December 15, 1817, by W. H. Morgan. Line Engraved. 

JAMES MADISON Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
President of the United States. Line Engraved. 

DANIEL WEBSTER Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
At Franklin, the home of his childhood. Lithograph. 

ANDREW JACKSON Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
At the Hermitage, in 1830. R. E. Earl, Pinx. Lithograph, Pendleton. 
Bufford’s Lithography. 

ISRAEL PUTNAM Owner, Mr. Dudley L. 
(Title in French.) Major-General of the Forces of the Province Conn., 
etc., mezzotint. 

BOSTON MASSACRE Owner, Mr. C. 


Drawn by W. C. Champney. Colored lithograph by J. H. Bufford. 


[36] 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


Pickman 


S. Drake 


455 


456 


457 


458 


459 


460 


461 


462 


463 


464 


465 


466 


BOSTON NEWS LETTER Owner, Mr. C. S. Drake 


Thursday, October 3, to Thursday, October 10, 1723. Giving very in- 
teresting news of the times. 


PORTRAIT OF THE HON. WILLIAM SHIRLEY, ESQ. Owner, Mr. C. S. Drake 


Governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in New England, 1741, 
etc. T. Hudson, Pinx., 1750. J. McArdell, fecit, mezzotint. 


THE ATTACK ON TRIPOLI Owner, Mr. C. S. Drake 


On the 3rd of August, 1804, by the American Squadron under Commo- 
dore Preble. J.B. Guerrazzi. Sold at Leghorn, 1805. Line Engraving 
Colored. 


BURNING OF THE AMERICAN FRIGATE 
PHILADELPHIA Owner, Mr. C. S. Drake 


in the Harbor of Tripoli. J. B. Guerrazzi. Sold at Leghorn, 1805. 
Line Engraving Colored. 


ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN THE 
CONSTITUTION AND GUERRIERE Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 


August 19, 20, 1812. Published October 1 and November 10, 
1812, by B. Tanner. Two Line Engravings Colored. 


AMERICAN FRIGATE CONSTELLATION Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 


Capturing the French National Frigate L’Insurgente within sight of 
Bassetone, February 9, 1799. Line Engraving Colored 


PORTRAIT OF COMMODORE TRUXTON ‘ Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 


of the Navy of the United States. A. R. Robertson, Pinx. C. Tiebout, 
Sculptor. Stipple. 


BRILLIANT VICTORY Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 


obtained by Commodore O. H. Perry, over the British Fleet on Lake 
Erie. Commanded by Captain Barclay, September 10, 1813. Line 
Engraving Colored. 


PORTRAIT OF JOHN PAUL JONES Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 
Des. C. J. Notte, French Mezzotint. 

PORTRAIT OF CAPTAIN I. HULL Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 
Engraved by W. Strickland. Published by John Kneass, Philadelphia, 
aquatint. 

PORTRAIT OF GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 


E. Savage, Pinx. and Sculptor, mezzotint. 


ORIGINAL LETTER Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 
from Esek Hopkins to Colonel John Waterman, February 15, 1777 (L.S.). 


[37] 


467 


468 


469 


470 


471 


472 


473 


474 


475 


476 


477 


478 


479 


SPLENDID VICTORIES IN THE WAR OF 1812 Owner, Killingly Farm 
Gained by the U. S. Frigates over the British since the commencement of 
the present war. New Haven, March 20, 1813. Engraved and published 
by A. Doolittle.. Line Engraving Colored. 

COLONEL JOHNSON’S CHARGE, ETC. Owner, Killingly Farm 
Engraved by R. Rawdon. Published and sold by Shelton and Kensett, 
Cheshire, Conn., December 6, 1813. Line Engraving Colored. 

JOHN PAUL JONES, colored print, 1780 Owner, Killingly Farm 


PORTRAIT OF GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Killingly Farm 
Painted by R. Wright of Philadelphia. P. Dawe, Sculptor, London. 
Published by D. Gally, January 8, 1801, mezzotint. 

THE PRODIGAL SON Owner, Killingly Farm 
Four plates engraved by A. Doolittle. Published and sold by Shelton 
and Kensett, Cheshire, Conn., 1814. Line Engraving Colored. 

ORIGINAL LETTER Owner, Killingly Farm 
John Paul Jones to Thomas Jefferson, when Jefferson was Minister to 
France, 1785. 

BOSTON MASSACRE | Owner, Killingly Farm 
Engraved, printed and sold by Paul Revere, Boston. Line Engraving 
Colored. 

GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Colored, engraving on glass. 


a 


By Langier, after Cogniet’s original painting of 1836 Map Pte , 
BOSTON MASSACRE, circa 1780 Owner, Mrs. Parker Whittemore 


Almost identical with Paul Revere’s engraving of same subject. One of 
three copies known. 


Engraved by Jonathan Mulliken (a Newburyport clock maker) 


THE MITRED MINUET Owner, Rev. Abbot Peterson 
A print. 
Engraved by Paul Revere, 1774 
GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
A colored mezzotint. Published by Fairburn, London, Feb. 26, 1801. 


BENJAMIN FRANKLIN Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


A mezzotint. Published in London, Sept. 17, 1793, after a painting by 
D. Martin. 
Engraved by Savage 


JOHN QUINCY ADAMS = Owner, Dr. A. A. Cliff 


A colored mezzotint. Contemporary. 


[38] 


480 COLONEL BENEDICT ARNOLD Owner, Dr. A. A. Cliff 


A mezzotint. 
By Thomas Hart, 1776 


480a LAFAYETTE Owner, Dr. A. A. Cliff 
A lithograph. 
By Pendleton 
481 A SHOAL OF SPERM WHALE OFF THE ISLAND 
OF HAWAII Owner, Mr. Allan Forbes 


Engraved, printed, and colored by J. Hill. . Published by C. B. Hulsart, 
1838. 


Painted by T. Birch of Philadelphia from a sketch by C. B. Hulsart 


482 SPERM WHALING Owner, Mr. Allan Forbes 


THE CHASE 
Lithographed by Endicott & Co., New York, from drawings by A. Van 
Best and R. S. Gifford; corrected by Benj. Russell, Esq., 1859. 


THE ConFLict 
Prang & Mayer’s Lithography, Boston. Published by Charles Taber & 
Co., New Bedford. J. Cole, 1859, pinx. 


THE CaPpTuRE 
Lithographed by Endicott & Co., New York, from drawings by A. Van 
Best and R. S. Gifford; corrected by Benj. Russell, Esq., 1862. 


483 A SHIP ON THE NORTHWEST COAST CUTTING 
IN HER LAST RIGHT WHALE Owner, Mr. Allan Forbes 


Lithographed by A. Mayer. Printed by Lemercier, Paris. 
Designed by Benj. Russell, New Bedford - 


484 SPERM WHALING AND ITS VARIETIES Owner, Mr. Allan Forbes 
Lithographed by J. H. Bufford, New York. 
From drawing by Benj. Russell, Esq., New Bedford, 1870 


485 RIGHT WHALING IN BEHRING STRAITS AND 
ARCTIC OCEAN WITH ITS VARIETIES Owner, Mr. Allan Forbes 
Lithographed by J. H. Bufford, New York. 
Drawing by Benj. Russell, New Bedford, 1871 


486 COLLECTION OF SCRIM- 


SHAW WORK Owners, Mr. H. M. Aldrich, Mr. Stanley G. French, 
Mr. Beverly Rantoul, Mr. B. F. W. Russell, 
Mr. Frank Wood. 


Including jagging wheels, busks, swifts, canes, engraved whale’s teeth 
and other articles made by sailors during whaling voyages. 


487 MODEL OF THE NEW BEDFORD WHALER 
“BENJAMIN TUCKER” Owner, Mr. Allan Forbes 


Later sunk by the Confederate privateer, “General Armstrong.” 


[39] 


*488 MODEL OF ENGLISH SHIP-OF-THE-LINE, circa 1790 


Of boxwood. 

489 MODEL OF 72 GUN SHIP-OF-THE-LINE Owner, Rev. Abbot Peterson 
Of bone and ivory. 

490 TEA-CLIPPER “MARMION,”’ circa 1800 Owner, Rev. Abbot Peterson 
In case. 

491 MODEL OF AMERICAN BRIG “SIREN” Owner, Mr. Hollis French 


Early Nineteenth Century. 
492 HALF MODEL OF TOPSAIL SCHOONER 


“WASP,” circa 1750 Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 
493 HALF MODEL Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 
Full rigged ship off Minot’s light. 
494 MODEL OF WHALE BOAT, 1860-70 Owner, Mr. Nathaniel F. Emmons 
Of bone. Fully equipped. 
495 MODEL OF WHALE BOAT Owner, Mr. Henry G. Vaughan 


Of wood. Fully equipped, on davits. Modern reproduction to scale. 
Maker, Bernard Hart 


495a MODEL OF THE “CONSTITUTION” Owner, Mr. Robert G. Clark 
Built from pieces of that ship when repaired in 1812. 


*496 SHIP “REYNARD” 
Oil painting by H. Peterson, 1871. 


*497 BARK “SACHEM” 
Oil painting by Sempill. 
*498 WHALING SCENE 


Oil painting by unknown artist. 
499 THE CONSTITUTION Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 
A painting. (From the Ives collection.) 
499a POSTER OF “WOOD’S MUSEUM,” Boston,¥1804 Owner, Mrs. Charles K. Bolton 
499b NEW ENGLAND PRIMER, Boston, 1767 Owner, Mr. George P. Winship 


499c NEW ENGLAND PRIMER, Concord, 1813 Owner, Mr. George P. Winship 


*500 SCENES FROM BEACON HILL, dated 1856 
Lithographs by J. H. Bufford, New York. 
View From Mr. VERNON STREET View FROM Hancock STREET 
VIEW FROM DERNE STREET VIEW FROM BowDoINn STREET 


[ 40 ] 


501 


502 


503 


504 


505 


506 


507 


508 


509 


510 


511 


SH: 


GLASS 


COLLECTION OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
1780-1810 


Owners, Mr. and Mrs. John Spring 


SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 2 in.; diameter, 214 in. Hobnail design 
SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 2 in.; diameter, 234 in. Daisy and hobnail design. 


SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 214 in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 
SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 21% in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 
SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 234 in.; diameter, 234 in. Daisy and hobnail design. 
SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 214 in.; diameter, 234 in. Daisy and diamond design. 


SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 134 in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail and diamond design. 


HAT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 134 in.; diameter, 134 in. Diamond design. 


HAT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 134 in.; diameter, 1% in. Diamond design. 


HAT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 214 in.; diameter, 214 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


HAT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 214 in.; diameter, 234 in. Daisy, diamond and fluted design. 


FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 5 in.; diameter, 414 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


[41] 


513 


514 


515 


516 


517 


518 


519 


520 


521 


SP 


523 


524 


525 


526 


a2f 


COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS. JOHN SPRING, Cont. 
FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 434 in.; diameter, 334 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 
FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 534 in.; diameter, 4% in. Diamond design. 
FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 

White: height, 514 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 41% in.; diameter, 314 in. Hobnail and diamond design. 


FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 534 in.; diameter, 444 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 534 in.; diameter, 414 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


FLIP GLASS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 534 in.; diameter, 414 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


BOTTLE OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 234 in. Diamond and daisy design. 


PAIR OF BARREL SHAPE TUMBLERS OF THREE-SECTION 
MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 3 in.; diameter, 2in. Hobnail and fluted design. 
PAIR OF BARREL SHAPE TUMBLERS OF THREE-SECTION 
MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 334 in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


PAIR OF TUMBLERS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 314 in.; diameter, 3in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


PAIR OF TUMBLERS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 324 in.; diameter, 214 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


PAIR OF TUMBLERS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS — 
White: height, 234 in.; diameter, 2 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


PAIR OF TUMBLERS OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 134 in.; diameter, 114 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


PAIR OF WINE GLASSES OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 434 in.; diameter, 2in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


[42 ] 





GROUP OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 





528 


529 


530 


Dot 


532 


533 


534 


535 


536 


537 


538 


539 


540 


541 


542 


COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS. JOHN SPRING, Cont. 
PAIR OF WINE GLASSES OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 234 in.; diameter, 134 in. Hobnail, daisy and fluted design. 


TUMBLER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 2 in.; diameter, 134 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


BARREL SHAPE MUG OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 3 in.; diameter, 24 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


MUG OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 214 in.; diameter, 2 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 
MUG OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 214 in.; diameter, 214 in. Diamond and fluted ring design. 
PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 2 in. Hobnail and daisy design. 
PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 2 in. Hobnail and daisy design. 
TUMBLER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 34 in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail, daisy and fluted design. 
SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 4 1n.; diameter, 4% in. Diamond and fluted design. 


TUMBLER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 3 in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


TUMBLER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 3 in.; diameter, 214 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 334 in.; diameter 414 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


SUGAR BOWL ON STANDARD WITH COVER OF THREE-SECTION 
MOULD GLASS 


White: height, 514 in.; diameter, 5 in. Diamond, daisy and fluted design. 


PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 334 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 624 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


[43 ] 


COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS. JOHN SPRING, Cont. 


543 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 634 in. Fluted design. 


544 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 5 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


545 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 434 in. Foliage and fluted design. 


546 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 7 in. Fluted and scroll design. 


547 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 614 in. Hobnail, sunburst and fluted design. 


548 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 434 in. Hobnail and daisy design. 


549 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 3in. Hobnail and daisy design. 


550 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 234 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


551 PAIR OF VASES OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 734 in.; diameter, 5 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


552. DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 534 in. Herring bone and fluted design. 


553 DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 614 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


554 CUP PLATE OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 41% in. Diamond design. 


555 CUP PLATE OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 4in. Diamond design. 


556 DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 534 in. Diamond and sunburst design. 


557 DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 1014 in. Diamond, sunburst and fluted design. 


[44 ] 


558 


Boo 


560 


561 


562 


563 


564 


565 


566 


567 


568 


569 


570 


571 


572 


COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS. JOHN SPRING, Cont. 
DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 


White: diameter, 5 in. Diamond, sunburst and fluted design. 


DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 634 in. Diamond and sunburst design. 


DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 634 in. Daisy, diamond and fluted design. 


DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 534 in. Diamond, sunburst and fluted design. 


DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 8 in. Daisy, diamond and fluted design. 


DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 


White: diameter, 8 in. Daisy, diamond and fluted design. 


DISH OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: diameter, 834 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


BOWL ON STANDARD OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS | 
White: height, 514 in.; diameter, 8 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


BOWL ON STANDARD OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
White: height, 3 in.; diameter, 514 in. Diamond and fluted design. 


STIEGEL FLIP GLASS, 1768-74 
White: height, 814 in.; diameter, 64 in. Tulip and flower pot decoration. 


-STIEGEL FLIP GLASS, 1768-74 


White: height, 834 in.; diameter, 614 in. Tulip decoration. 


STIEGEL FLIP GLASS, 1768-74 
White: height, 834 in.; diameter, 7 in. Radiating sun decoration. 


BOWL OF EARLY AMERICAN GLASS 
Amethyst: height, 3 in.; diameter, 4 in. 


PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Blue: height, 4% in. Daisy and diamond design. 


SALT OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 
Olive green: height, 234 in.; diameter, 134 in. 


[45 ] 


COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS. JOHN SPRING, Cont. 
573. BOWL ON STANDARD OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 
Brown: height, 234 in.; diameter, 314 in. 
574 STIEGEL SALT, 1768-74 
Blue: height, 234 in Diamond design. 
575 HAT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Blue: height, 244 in. Hobnail and fluted design. 


576 SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Blue: height, 134 in. Daisy and hobnail design. 


577. PITCHER OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 
Olive green: height, 314 in. 

578 BOTTLE OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Blue: height, 7 in. Hobnail design. 


579 SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Blue: height, 244 in. Sunburst and hobnail design. 


580 PITCHER OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Cobalt blue: height, 4% in. Fluted design. 


581 SALT OF THREE-SECTION MOULD GLASS 
Blue: height, 2 in.; diameter, 234 in. Hobnail and daisy design. 
582 SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER OF EARLY AMERICAN GLASS 
Green: height, 4 in. 
583 PITCHER OF JERSEY GLASS 
Green: height, 34 in. 
584 PITCHER OF JERSEY GLASS 
Green: height, 6 in. Crimped base. 
585 BOTTLE OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 
Olive green: height, 9% in. 
586 BOTTLE OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 
Green: height, 7 in. 
587. BOTTLE OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 
Brown: height, 7 in. 
588 BOTTLE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE GLASS, 1816 
Green: height, 8 in. 


[ 46 ] 


/ $89 BOTTLE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE GLASS, 1816 
Green: height, 634 in. 


(590 BOTTLE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE GLASS, 1816 
Green: height, 614 in. 
591 VASE OF EARLY STODDARD GLASS, 1846 


Brown: height, 5 in.; diameter, 334 in. Hobnail and daisy design. 


592 BOWL OF NEW YORK STATE GLASS 
Amber: height, 4 in.; diameter, 124 in. 

593 BOWL OF WISTARBERG GLASS, 1820 
Green: height, 414 in.; diameter, 1114 in. 

594. BOWL OF NEW YORK STATE GLASS 


Green: height, 3 in.; diameter, 13 in. 


595 STIEGEL GLASS SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Sapphire blue: height, 474 in. Large diamond expanded molded pattern. 


596 STIEGEL GLASS PANELLED FLOWER VASE Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Sapphire blue: height, 734 in. 


597 STIEGEL GLASS PANELLED FLOWER VASE Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Amethyst: height, 74 in. 


598 STIEGEL GLASS TOILET BOTTLE _ Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Amethyst: height 51% inches. With large diamond expanded molded 
pattern. 

599 STIEGEL COVERED FLIP GLASS Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 


White: height, 1134 inches. Engraved rosebud pattern made by 
Stiegel at the time of the marriage of his daughter Elizabeth to William 
Old. 


600 STIEGEL COVERED VASE Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Sapphire blue: height, 143¢ inches. Opaque white rim and finial. 


601 COVERED MUG Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
_ Sapphire: height, 94 in. Probably made by Stiegel. 


602 GLASS PITCHER OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Green: height, 814 in. Redipped, tooled pattern. 


603 LIPPED VASE OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Amber: height, 634 in. Folded rim. 


[47] 


604 


605 


606 


607 


608 


609 


610 


611 


612 


613 


614 


615 


616 


617 


618 


BOWL OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Blue: height, 434 in. Folded rim. 


PITCHER OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Sea-green: height, 5 in. Crimped foot. 
PITCHER OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 


Light sea-green: height, 73¢ in. Redipped, tooled pattern. 


COVERED SUGAR BOWL OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Light turquoise green: height, 624 in. 


PITCHER OF SOUTH JERSEY Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Emerald green: height, 6 in. Crimped foot. 

OPEN POT JAR Owner, Mr. W. G. R. Allen 
Amber: height, 105¢ in. Folded rim. Stoddard, N. H. 

PAIR OF STIEGEL COVERED MUGS Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Height, 914 in. Dove and flower design inclosed in a circle with sun- 
burst radiations. 

PAIR STIEGEL FLIP GLASSES Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Height, 84 in. Tulip design. 

STIEGEL SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Blue: height, 6 in. Diamond design. 

STIEGEL CREAMER Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Blue: height, 434 in. Diamond design. 

STIEGEL SALT CELLAR Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Blue: height, 334 in. Diamond design. Ogee sides. 

STIEGEL POCKET BOTTLE Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
White: height, 614 in. Fluted design. 

PITKIN FLASK Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Height, 5 in. Olive brown. 

SNUFF BOTTLE OF STODDARD GLASS Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Height, 434 in. Brown. 

TWO SANDWICH BOTTLES Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 


Blue. Made in 1825, the first year of the factory. 


ca 


[48 ] 


619 


620 


621 


622 


TWO SANDWICH VASES Owner, Mr. Harold Pitman 
Made in 1830, after Nelsea style. 


TWO BLUE DOLPHIN CANDLESTICKS Owner, Mrs. Lindsley Loring 
Sandwich glass. 

TWO BLUE DOLPHIN DISHES Owner, Mrs. Lindsley Loring 
Sandwich glass. 

COLLECTION OF “LACE” SANDWICH GLASS Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 


Earliest Period 1825-49. Fifty pieces. 


[49 ] 


ROTTER 


623 DEEP EARTHENWARE SLIP PLATES Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


Yellow staniferous glaze; design in deep brown. Probably unique in 
American pottery. 
Perhaps from Bean Hill, Conn. 


624 TWO SLIPWARE DISHES Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


a Deep Ovat Disu, 16% x 12% in. 
4 Deep Ova Disu, 1714 x 41% in. 
Chocolate brown glaze, cream slip design. 


From New York State, clearly by Dutch craftsmen 


625 PENNSYLVANIA SLIP OVAL DISH Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
“Good and cheap,” in yellow and green. 

626 CONNECTICUT SLIP MILK PAN Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 

627 GROUP OF POTTERY Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


a Larce Jue, 11% in. high. 

b Tat, SLENDER Jar, 61% x 4 in. 

¢ Jar wir Cover, 5 in. high, 514 in. in diameter. 

d Oren Bowt or Gracerut Desien, 234 in. high. 

e Jar witn Hanp es, 6% in. high, 6 in. in diameter. 
Hard Fire Salt Glass. These pieces are chocolate brown in color and 
characterized by a delicate incised design. 


From Boscawen, N. H. 


628 SMALL COVERED JAR Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
534 in. high x 43 in. in diameter. Exquisite olive-green glaze with 
splash of dull red brown. 


From Wachusett Mountain, Princeton, Mass. 


629 GROUP OF POTTERY FROM BARNSTABLE, 
circa 1800 Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
a GREEN Pircuer, 1034 in. high. 
Glaze, faintly mottled deep green with blue high lights. 
b Pircuer, 8 in. high. 
Faintly mottled golden brown. Deep brown splashes. 
¢ Pireuer, 7% in. high. 
Dust colored glaze, barely covering red clay, with an overglaze of Barn- 
stable green. 


d Fiower Pot. 
Same rich green, showing touches of red. 


[50] 





ERY 


RLY AMERICAN POTT 


GROUP OF EA 





% 


630 


631 


632 


633 


634 


635 


636 


637 


638 


639 


640 


641 


COVERED YEAST OR BATTER-JAR Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
Heavy and crude, 914 in. high. Broad spout running to bottom of the jar. 


COVERED JAR Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
Graceful shape, 834 in. high, 74 in. in diameter. Black glaze on out- 
side. Tortoise shell glaze on inside. 
Perhaps from Bergholt’s Pottery, N. Y. 
JUG Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
Lower part marked by circular ridges. Overglaze; dark gray brown, 
shot with blue, producing brilliant sheen. 12 in. high. 
SIX VINEGAR JUGS, OF VARYING COLORS Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


From New England States. 


STONEWARE PITCHER Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
Marked “Charlestown” with a heart below. Refined in shape and 
well mottled. 123% in. high. 

STONEWARE JUG, circa 1804 Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


Marked “Boston, 1804,” red brown at top and bottom, leaving center 
band of grey stoneware. 1534 in. high. 


INK WELL Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
Potter’s ‘“‘tester,”’ used to determine the state of the glaze in firing. 
TWO STONEWARE FLASKS Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


For saddle use. 


A GROUP OF EIGHT MUGS 


From as many potteries. 


Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


ALBANY SLIP GLAZE, circa 1840 Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


Two pieces to show this glaze, which replaced the highly colored lead 
glazes, more or less poisonous. 


GROUP OF SIX LITTLE JUGS 


Commonly used for liquor. 


Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


GROUP OF BARNSTABLE POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 
a Tatu Pircuer, green glaze. 
6 Jue, brilliant green glaze. 
c Juc, mottled green and brown. 


d Juc, mottled green and red. 


[51] 


642 GROUP OF ABINGTON POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 


a Jar, dull dark-green glaze. 

b Jar, dull light-green glaze. 

¢ Jue, brilliant brown and green glaze. 
d SMALL JAR, most unique color, 

e LittLe Jar, with cover. 


643 TWO PIECES OF DANVERS POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 


644 


645 


646 


647 


648 


a Tac Pircuer, black glaze. 
4 Mug, brilliantly colored. 


GROUP OF CONNECTICUT VALLEY POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 


a Very Rare Disu, red with green and yellow border. 
4 Bott te, to be worn on arm. 

¢ Jar, red with black splashes. 

d Jar, brown, mottled with black. 

e Jar, light and dark brown, mottled. 

Ff Jar, light and dark brown, mottled. 

g Tau Pitcuer, with cover. 


THREE PIECES OF HARTFORD POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 
a LarcE Container, black in uneven color glaze. ‘ : . 
6 Tart Jar, light green, mottled with brown. : Tm un. TO mn Awe) 
¢ Jar, light and dark coloring. ur iiretrati on eff 
TWO PIECES OF CONCORD, N. H., POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 


@ SMALL Jar, mottled red and green coloring. 
6 SMALL Jar, mottled red and green coloring. 


TWO PIECES OF PENNSYLVANIA POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 


a CovERED Jak, brilliant red and black with incised band borders. 
6 PLaTTER, orange with yellow border. 


TWO PIECES OF SOUTH CAROLINA POTTERY Owner, Mr. H. B. Russell 


a TALL, AMPHORA-SHAPED Jar, from pottery near Aiken. 
b Jar, of gingerbread coloring. 


[52] 


A 


- 


AYHLLOd LAOILOANNOOD HO dNOUD 


1 
1 

















671 


672 


673 


674 


675 


676 


677 


678 


679 


*680 


681 


682 


PEWTER 


CHARGER, circa 1770 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
14 in. long. 
Maker, D. Melville, Newport, R. I. 
BOWL, circa 1770 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
8 in. in diameter. 
Maker, Joseph Danforth 
PLATE, circa 1770 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
“Semper Eadem”’ 
BEAKER, circa 1810 Owner, Mr. S. Prescott Fay 
3% in. in diameter. 
Maker, William Calder 
CANDLESTICK, trumpet-shaped Owner, Mrs. Parker Whittemore 
Unmarked 
PAIR OF CANDLESTICKS, hexagonal base Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 


Unmarked 
PITCHER, circa 1830 Owner, Mrs. Charles Bolton 
Maker, ““R. Dunham” 
CHRISTENING BOWL, circa 1830 | Owner, Rt. Rev. James D. Perry 
Diameter 754 in. x 3% in. high. Found in Ridgefield, Conn. 
Maker, Samuel Danforth (Hartford) 
CHURCH FLAGON Owner, Rev. Abbot Peterson 
Found in the First Church in Duxbury. 
Maker, Calder 
PORRINGER 
5 in. in diameter. 
Maker, Pitman 
TODDY WARMER Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 
Unmarked. 
PAIR OF WHALE-OIL LAMPS Owner, Mr. H. F. Bigelow 
10 in. high. 


Maker, Putnam 


[53 ] 


683 


684 


685 


686 


687 


688 


689 


690 


691 


692 


693 


694 


SINGLE WHALE-OIL LAMP Owner, Mr. H. F. Bigelow 


10 in. high. 
Maker, Dunham 

EWER WITH ONE HANDLE Owner, Mr. H. F. Bigelow 

11 in. high. 

Makers, BaileyZ¥& Putnam 

CHURCH FLAGON Owner, Mr. H. F. Bigelow 

18 in. high. Pedestal, cover, thumb piece and handle. 

Unmarked 

CHURCH COLLECTION PLATE Owner, Mr. H. F.'Bigelow 


8 in. in diameter. 
Makers, Boardman” & Co., New York 


PLATE Owner, Mr. H. F. Bigelow 


714 in. in diameter. 
Maker, S. Stafford 


COMMUNION PLATE* Owner, Mr. H. F. Bigelow 


12 in. in diameter. 
Maker, Calder 


COVERED PITCHER WITH SNOUT Owner, Mrs 
8 in. high. 
Makers, T. Danforth and S. Boardman 
SMALL BOWL ' Owner, Mrs 
Makers, T. Danforth" and S. Boardman 
TANKARD Owner, Mrs 
6 in. high. 


Maker, D. Melville 


FLINT AND TINDER Owner, Mrs 


5 in. in diameter, 134 in. high, hinged cover. 
Maker, Ashabel Griswold 


TWO WHALE-OIL LAMPS 


Turned pedestals. 
Maker, Gleason 


SMALL TEAPOT, LONG CURVED SPOUT Owner, Mrs 


Maker, T. Danforth 


[54] 


. Mary!M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


695 


696 


697 


698 


699 


700 


701 


702 


703 


704 


705 


706: 


707 


HOT WATER PLATE 
10 in. in diameter. 
Maker, Henry Wills 
SMALL MUG WITH HANDLE 
4% in. high. 
Maker, T. Danforth 
PEWTER LADLE WITH COPPER HANDLE 
Maker, R. Lee 


CHARGER 
16 in. in diameter. 
Maker, Austin 


DEEP COVERED VEGETABLE OR 
SOUP DISH 


12 in. in diameter, two hinged handles. 


SUGAR BOWL WITH COVER AND HANDLES 


Owner, Mrs 


Owner, Mrs 


Owner, Mrs 


Owner, Mr 


Makers, Boardman & Co., Troy, N. Y. 


PAIR OF SALTS ON PEDESTAL 
2% in. high. 
Unmarked 
CIRCULAR INKWELL 


41% in. in diameter, 2 in. high, with sander. 
Unmarked 


PAIR OF CHURCH CHALICES 
Turned pedestals, 8 in. high. 


PAIR OF LARGE WHALE-OIL LAMPS 


12 in. high. 
Maker, Gleason 


HOUR LAMP 


15 in. high; glass bowl with hours marked on it. 


Unmarked 


CIRCULAR TOBACCO BOX 
5 in. in diameter, 4 in. high; tin cover. 
Unmarked 


CIRCULAR PATTEN 
11 in. in diameter; three bell-shaped feet. 


[55 ] 


Owner, Mr 


Owner, Mr 


Owner, Mr. 


Owner, Mr 


Owner, Mr 


Owner, Mr 


Owner, Mr 


Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


. Mary M. Sampson 


Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 


. Sherwood Rollins 


. Sherwood Rollins 


. Sherwood Rollins 


Sherwood Rollins 


. Sherwood Rollins 


. Sherwood Rollins 


. Sherwood Rollins 


. Sherwood Rollins 


708 


709 


710 


711 


712 


LARGE BASIN Owner, Mr. Sherwood Rollins 
30 in. in diameter. 
Unmarked 
CIRCULAR FLINT AND TINDER Owner, Mr. Sherwood Rollins 


Curved top and base, finial on top, inside divided into two compartments, 
hinged top. About 5 in. in diameter. 


Unmarked 
CIDER PITCHER Owner, Mr. Sherwood Rollins 
9 in. high. 
Maker, Porter 
EGG CUP Owner, Mr. Sherwood Rollins 
3 in. high. 
Unmarked 
BOWL Owner, Mr. Sherwood Rollins 


5 in. high, 4 in. in diameter at base, 6 in. at top. 
Maker, S. Hersey 


[56] 


715 


716 


S717 


718 


719 


720 


721 


722 


723 


725 


726 


CHINA 
ENGLISH CHINA MADE FOR AMERICAN USE AND IDENTIFIED 
WITH THE LIFE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY 


TEA SET OF PINK LUSTRE \ Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore 
Eighteen pieces. 


TEA SET OF LOWESTOFT Owner, Mrs. Parker W. Whittemore: 


Sixteen pieces, eagle decoration, sometimes called “ Washington Lowestoft.” 


COLLECTION OF 87 STAFFORDSHIRE CUP-PLATES, circa 1820 


Made for the American market. 


FRUIT DISH, RIDGWAY POTTERY Owner, Mrs. G. Winthrop Brown 


Blue printed scenes of Boston. 


SILVER LUSTRE COFFEE, CREAM 
AND SUGAR Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 


LARGE BLUE COFFEE POT 
With pitcher of man at the tomb of Franklin. 


Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 


TOBEY JUG Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith. 
In image of General Washington. 

CUP AND SAUCER _ Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith. 
Picture of Mount Vernon on both. 

COLLECTION OF BLUE STAFFORDSHIRE 


PLATES Owner, Mr. Hermann F. Clarke 


American Scenes. 


SILVER RESIST LUSTRE TEAPOT Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell: 
Flower design. 

SILVER RESIST LUSTRE PITCHER Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell. 
With birds and flower design. 
Companion piece to teapot. 

SILVER RESIST PITCHER Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell. 


[57] 


727 


728 


729 


730 


731 


732 


733 


734 


735 


LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 
With print of ship Constitution. 


SMALL LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 


“Success to the crooked and interesting Town of Boston.” 


SMALL LIVERPOOL PITCHER _ Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 


With chain of thirteen colonies, surrounding a picture, showing monument 
of George Washington with motto, “A man without example — a patriot 
without reproach.” 


LIVERPOOL PUNCH-BOWL Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


Frigate Constellation, “Peace, Plenty and Independence.” 
14 in. in diameter. The Blacksmith’s Arms. 


LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mrs. John C. Spring 


Full rigged ship “Mary & Susan” (1826), “‘Shipwright’s Arms.” 
Initials L. (Lot Wheelwright.) 


LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
James Madison, “ Peace, Plenty and Independence.” 8 in. high. 


LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
Washington and ship, with name “Zebedee Cook.” 934 in. high. 


LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
“Washington in Glory” and urn. 7 in. high. 


LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


“The Wasp boarding the Frolic” and “The United States and the 
Macedonian.” 5% in. high. 


58 


*741 


742 


743 | 


744 


745 


746 


*747 


748 


749 


750 


751 


752 


TEXTILES 


TOILE-DE-JOUY, Late Eighteenth Century Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


Four-poster bed hanging, trimmed with hand-made linen fringe. Marine 
scenes in the original mulberry color. Unused. 


COUNTERPANE OF EMBROIDERED 
LINEN, 1767 Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 
Wrought by Lucy Baker, Ipswich * 


LONG STRIP OF COPPER PLATE Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 


Design of large swans in blue and white. 


PAIR OF SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES = Owner, Mrs. Henry Pickering Smith 


Hand-woven and embroidered. 


HANDKERCHIEF OF COPPER PLATE, 1812] Owner, Mrs. Parker Whittemore 


Designs in mulberry, commemorating the war of 1812, (Naval victories 
and twelve frigates participating). 


HOOKED RUG Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Design of ship with American Flag. 
Made by a cousin of the poet, Whittier 


COUNTERPANE 


Woven in blue and white with a quotation from Lafayette’s speech, 1825. 


EMBROIDERED PICTURE Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 
MatTErRNAL ArrFection, 1805. 
Wrought by Joanna Hoyt 


QUILTED GREEN AND RED COUNTERPANE, 
circa 1800 Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 


PICTURE OF SILK EMBROIDERY, 1812 
Wrought by Joanna Downs 


PICTURE OF SILK EMBROIDERY, 1812 
Wrought by Lucy Downs 


COVERLET, DOUBLE WOVEN, circa 1810 Owner, Miss Bertha E. Hewitt 


Blue and white with design of wreath and grape vine 


[59] 


753 


*754 
to 


WEY 


758 


759 


760 


761 


762 


763 


to 
764 


765 


to 
769 


770 


to 


772 


773 


774 


LARGE HOOKED RUG Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


Black, oval centre, with floral over-design, 8 ft., 9 in. x 11 ft., 6 in. 


EARLY OIL PAINTINGS ON LINEN, 1780-1810 Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 
Crude but interesting pictures of Colonial incidents, 5 ft., 10in. x 5 ft. 


HOOKED RUG Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


Black with floral festoons inside a conventional border. 


HOOKED RUG Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


Geometrical, over-all design, with floral centres. 


HOOKED RUG Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


Geometrical over-all design, with flower border on black. 


HOOKED RUG Owner, Mr. Hermann F. Clarke 
Raised floral pattern. 


TABLE CLOTH Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 


Hand woven. 


TWO SAMPLERS Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Victory ball; wrought by Rocksalana Wiles, 1783. 
Cross stitch coat of arms of E. Davis, wrought by Amy Davis. 


FIVE SAMPLERS Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 


Wrought by Sarah Nichols, Newbury, 1794. 
Molly Morse, Newbury, 1772. 


Jean Lillie, aged 8, 1797. 
Mary Wyatt, aged 11, 1812. 
Harriet Edwards, 1801. 
THREE SAMPLERS Owners, Dr. and Mrs. Charles J. White 


Wrought by Sarah Shirtleff Ripley, b. 1794. 
Sarah Jacob Briggs, aged 10, 
“This done in the year of our Lord 1805.” 
Catherine Partridge, aged 8, 1813. 


SAMPLER, before 1800 Owner, Mrs. Arthur W. Blake 
Wrought by Sarah Ball (maternal aunt of George Washington). 


CARPET OF EMBROIDERED WOOL, 1835 Owner, Mr. Homer E. Keyes 


Known as the “Caswell carpet’; made by Zeruah Higley Guerney 
(married Nemri Caswell, 1846). Found in Castleton, Vt. 


[60] 


e tne he 


ay, 
& 
os gue 


m x | 

: eo 73 3H 

% s Y 
; vs q 4 geo Cy) 


2 


FEV eeT 





No. 774 


CARPET OF EMBROIDERED WOOL 





eit) 


e7sG 
to 


*783 
*784 


785 


786 


787 


788 


789 


790 


791 


SILK EMBROIDERED PICTURE, 1817 


EIGHT HOOKED RUGS 


SILK HOOKED RUG 


COVERLET OF RED Owner, Mrs. Robert G. Clark 

Double woven. 
Decorated by Independence Carter 

COVERLET OF WOOL, circa 1780 ~ Owner, Mrs. James Otis Porter 
Woven. Apple green, with roses and foliage, lined with yellow cotton. 

SAMPLER, 1671 Owner, Mr. Edgar B. Sherrill 
Found in attic of Adelaide Phillips, Marshfield, Mass. 714 x 30 in. 

Wrought by Amy Jones 

PETIT-POINT PICTURE, 1790 Owner, Mrs. S. V. R. Crosby 
Ruth and Boaz. 

COLLECTION OF AMERICAN BEAD BAGS Owner, Mrs. George Dike 

HERALDIC EMBROIDERY, 1755 Owner, Mrs. H. N. Montague 
Ellis coat of arms. 

COVERLET Owner, Miss Adeline Moffat 


Woven by Abigail Adams 


[61] 


EARLY LIGHTING 


EXAMPLES FROM THE COLLECTION 
OF ARTHUR H. HAYWARD 


795 SEVENTEENTH CENTURY Owner, Mr, Arthur H. Hayward 


a Open TRIANGULAR GREASE Lamp oF [RON 


6 Betty Lamp or Iron 
Similar to one alleged to have been brought over in the Mayflower by 
Governor Carver. 

c Betry Lamp or [ron 
Mid-Seventeenth Century. 


d Tau Betry Lamp or PEWTER 
With double base, probably Dutch. 


e Hancinc Lamp or TIN 


With double base. 


f Rusu Licut Hotper or [Ron 


796 EIGHTEENTH CENTURY Owner, Mr. Arthur H. Hayward 


a Betry Lamp or Brass 

6 Grease Hanp Lamp or TIN 
With a weighted saucer. 

c SwINnciInG Sup Lamp or Brass 
For two open wicks. 

d HANGING or STANDING Lamp oF TIN 
With tilting oil font. 

e PisToL TINDER FOR STRIKING A LIGHT 


jf Trave inc Lamp or Brass 
For heating curling irons for the beaux and belles of Washington’s day. 


g Hanp Lantern or TIN 
With pewter whale oil lamp. 

A Hatr Rounp PEerFroraTED SHOP LANTERN OF TIN 
With original moulded tallow candle and pierced back. 


i SMALL LANTERN oF Woop 
Three sides of glass and wooden door set with four tiny pieces of mirror. 


j Hancinc CHANDELIER OF PEWTER 
For three candles. 


797 EARLY NINETEENTH CENTURY Owner, Mr. Arthur H. Hayward 
a Larp O11 Hanp Lamp oF TIN 
b TrIancuLtar Hanp Lantern FOR WHALE OIL 
¢ CanpLeE Mou _p or TIn ror TWENTY-FOUR CANDLES 


d SQuaRE LANTERN OF TIN 
With oil burner and curious little glass chimney. 


e CANDLE Box or TIN 


[ 62 ] 


800 


801 


802 


803 


804 


805 


806 


807 


ADDENDA 


RING WITH INSET OF HAIR 


Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 


Given by John and Abigail Adams to James and Mercy Warren as a 
token of the renewal of a friendship which had been interrupted by Mrs. 
Warren’s mention of John Adams in her “History of the American 


Revolution.” 


WALL PAPER PANEL “DOROTHY Q” 


Made in France for Dorothy Quincy at the time of her wedding. 


NINE OLD PAPER PANELS 
Eighteenth Century. 


100 Feet PINE SHEATHING 


TWO PANELLED WALLS OF PINE 


CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE 


PAIR OF BRASS MIRROR KNOBS 
- With embossed portrait bust of George Washington. 


‘COLLECTION OF MINIATURES 


[63 ] 


Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 


Owner, Mr. J. Lovell Little 


Owner, Mrs. Ethel Walling 





PATRON’S LIST 


Mr. Hovxker ABBOTT Mr. Freperick G. HAti 
Hon. Frank ALLEN Mr. Aucustus HEmMENWay 
Mr. WILi14Am Amory Mr. Cuarves Hiccinson 
Mr. NaTHANIEL F. AYER Mr. Epwarpb BurLINGAME HILL 
Dr. Harotp W. Baker Mr. Conrap Hoss 

Dr. Witiiam Hewson BattzELi Mr. Epwarp J. Homes 

Mr. FRANKLIN H. BEEBE Mr. Ratppy HornBLloweER 
Mr. Henry Forses BicELow Mr. James ME.LvILLtE HUNNEWELI. 
Mr. GeorcE Nixon Brack Mr, James JAcKson 

Mr. Freverick J. BRADLEE, JR. Mr. Georce C. LEE 

Dr. L. Vernon Briccs Mr. Josepu LEE 

Mr. L. Lorine Brooks Mr. Harry V. Lone 

Mr. Joun Carro_ii CHaAse Mr. ALEXANDER WaADSWorTH LONGFELLOW 
Dr. GeorceE O. CLark Mr. Guy Lowe. 

Mr. Epwarp BEenjAMIN COLE Mr. Rocer B. MERRIMAN 
Mr. FreperIck S. CONVERSE Mr. JosepH Grarron Minot 
Mr. Cuartes A. CooLipGE Mr. Georce W. Mirron 
Mr. J. TEmPpLEMAN COOLIDGE Rev. Gienn Tittey Morse 
Mr. Howarp Coon._ey Mr. Everett Morss 

Mr. ALLEN CurrTIS Dr. T. Morris Murray 

Mr. Ernest B. DANE Mr. Cuarvtes Hovey PEPPER 
Mr. Ricuarp E. DANIELSON Mr. Dub ey L. PickMAn 
Dr. Francis H. Davenport Mr. Harotp A. PITMAN 

Mr. C. F. Drake Mr. Carveton R. RicHMonD 
Dr. THEOoDorE J. EasTMAN Mr. Hersert M. Sears 

Mr. Georce H. EpcELL Dr. Freperick C. SHATTUCK 
Mr. Joun W. FarweE.i Mr. Henry L. Suatruck 
Mr. Desmonp FirzGErRALD Dr. Epwarp B. SHEEHAN 
Mr. ALLAN ForsBes Mr. Pierpont L. STACKPOLE 
Mr. Henry Forp Mr. Gacen L. STONE 

Hon. Louis A. FRoTHINGHAM Mr. Rosert G. STONE 

Mr. Georce PeEasopy GARDNER Mr. ALBERT THORNDIKE 

Mr. WILL1aAM A. GASTON Dr. Ricuarp D. WADSWORTH 
Jupcr Rosert Grant Mr. Wi.i1AM Q. WALES 

‘Dr. WitiiaM P. Graves Mr. Cuarces C. WALKER 
Mr, Francis Gray Mr. AtBert B. WELLS 

Mr. Morris Gray Mr. Cuanninc M. WELLS 


PATRONESS’S LIST 


Mrs. Gorpon ABBOTT Mrs. GeorceE R. AGAssIz 
Mrs. TIMoTHEE ADAMOWSKI Miss Martua T. ALFrorD 
Mrs. CHarLes Francis ADAMS Mrs. Gorpon ALLEN 


[65 ] 


Mrs. FREDERICK LoTHROoP AMES 
Mrs. Hosart AMES 

Mrs. Harcourt Amory, Jr. 
Mrs. WILLIAM AMORY 

Mrs. Larz ANDERSON 

Miss SarauH G. ANDREWS 

Mrs. Epwarp W. ATKINSON 
Mrs. Cuartes Fanninc AYER 
Mrs. NaTHANIEL F. AYER 
Mrs. Gaspar G. Bacon 

Mrs. Wi.ii1am Hewson BaALtTzELL 
Mrs. Evsra L. BarRKER 

Mrs. Cuar_es B. Barnes 
Mrs. Epwin B. BarTLetr 
Mrs. Joun W. BartTou 

Mrs. Georce L. BaTcHELDER 
Mrs. Oric Bates 

Mrs. Boytston Apams BEAL 
Mrs. ArtTuur W. BeELi 

Mrs. ALBERT F, BIGELOW 
Mrs. Horace BINNEY 

Mrs. Cuar.es S. Birp, Jr. 
Mrs. ArtHur WELLAND BLAKE 
Mrs. Henry M. Biss 

Mrs. J. A. Lowe. Biake 
Mrs. FrepDeriIck S. BLODGETT 
Mrs. Ernest W. BowpitTcu 
Mrs. Cuartes BoypEN 

Mrs. Freperick J. BRADLEE 
Mrs. J. D. Cameron BRADLEY 
Mrs. J. GARDNER BRADLEY 
Mrs. LevereTT BRADLEY 

Mrs. Ratpuo BraDLey 

Mrs. GerALD A, BRAMWELL 
Mrs. GorHAM Brooks 

Mrs. Downinc Potrer Brown 
Mrs. Nanna Matruews Bryant 
Mrs. Freperic M. BurnHam 
Mrs. Witi1am A. BuRNHAM 
Mrs. I. Tucker Burr 

Mrs. CuHarLes CasotT 

Miss NELLIE P. CarTER 

Mrs. Henry CHAsE 

Mrs. Davip W. CHEEVER 
Mrs. Cuar es F. CHoate 
Mrs. Rosert J. CLark 

Miss CaTHERINE AMory CoDMAN 
Mrs. Joun Sturcis CopMAN 
Mrs. FREDERICK S. CONVERSE 


Mrs. Cuar.es A. CooLipGE 
Mrs. Haroip JEFFERSON CooLIDGE 
Mrs. T. JEFFERSON CooLIDGE 
Mrs. Cuartes K. Cummincs 
Mrs. Epwarp CuNNINGHAM, JR. 
Mrs. FrEDERIC CUNNINGHAM 
Mrs. CHarLes PELHAM CurRTIS 
Mrs. Cuares Petyam Curtis, Jr. 
Mrs. Horatio G. Curtis 

Mrs. Joun S. Curtis 

Mrs. Louis Curtis 

Mrs. Louis Curtis, Jr. 

Mrs. Georce M. CusHineG 
Mrs. Georc_E B. DaBney 

Mrs. Ernest B. Dane 

Mrs. De Forest DaniELSon 
Mrs. Ricuarp E_y DaniELSoNn 
Mrs. Georce H. Davenport 
Mrs. ARTHUR E. Davis 

Mrs. James Dean 

Mrs. Georce L. De Buots 
Mrs. Epwin S. DopcE 

Mrs. Rosert Gray DopcEe 
Mrs. B. H. Bristow Draper 
Mrs. Exsen S. DRAPER 

Mrs. WILi1AM ARTHUR DUPEE 
Mrs. CLarence R. Epwarps 
Miss Hannay M. Epwarps 
Mrs. E. H. Eviison 

Mrs. Rospert Wa_es Emmons, 2nD 
Mrs. Witi14mM B. Emmons 
Mrs. WILi1aAmM EnpIcoTT 

Mrs. Wiu1am C, Enpicort, Jr. 
Mrs. Davip J. Evans 

Mrs. Henry C, EVERETT 

Mrs. Henry C. Everett, Jr. 
Mrs. Francis Wricut FaByan 
Mrs. Joun WELLS Far_Ley 
Mrs. Henry M. Faxon 

Mrs. Josepu S. Fay 

Mrs. SAmMuEL Prescott Fay 
Mrs. Russe_t G. FessENDEN 
Mrs. GarDINnER H. Fiske 

Mrs. Conover FitTcu 

Mrs. Wa LTER Scotr Fitz 

Mrs. STEPHEN S. FITZGERALD 
Mrs. ALLAN A. ForBeEs 

Miss Eruer A. Forses 

Mrs. Francis Murray ForsBeEs 


[66] 


Mrs. Ho.uis FreNcH 

Mrs. DonaLp Frost 

Mrs. Louis A. FROTHINGHAM 
Mrs. Ranpo._pH FRoTHINGHAM 
Mrs. ALvan T. FULLER 

Mrs. Tuomas B. GANNETT 

Mrs. Georce PEaBoDy GARDNER 


Mrs. GeorcE Peasopy GARDNER, JR. 


Mrs. Witx1am A. Gaston 
Mrs, Wiii1am H. Goopwin 
Mrs. Ropert GRANT 

Mrs. WILL1aM P. GRAvES 

Mrs. Joun CuipMan Gray 
Mrs. Wixi1am H. Gray 

Mrs. Levi Heywoop GREENWOOD 
Mrs. Henry Sturcis GREW 
Mrs. Curtis GuILD 

Mrs. SaMvuE-L Exiot GuiLp 
Mrs. Ricwarp WaLDEN Hae 
Mrs. Joun L. Hari 

Mrs. N. Penrose HALLOWELL 
Mrs. Pau, M. HamM_Len 

Mrs. Dup.Ley Nickerson Hartr 
Mrs. J. Pottip Hartr 

Miss Atison HaucHTon 

Mrs. Rosert F. Herrick 
Mrs. FranKLIN W. Hosss 
Mrs. SuMNER HoLLincsworTH 
Mrs. Rosert Homans 

Mrs, James R, Hooper, Jr. 
Mrs. Amos Laurence Hopkins 
Miss Exizasetu G. HoucuTon 
Mrs. Arno_p W. HunNEWELL 
Mrs. James MELVILLE HUNNEWELL 
Mrs. WALTER HUNNEWELL 
Mrs. JAMES JACKSON 

Mrs. Wotcotr Howe Jounson 
Mrs. THEODORE JONES 

Mrs. Rosert JorDAN 

Mrs. Cari TILDEN KELLER 
Mrs. Georce T. Keyes 

Mrs. Cuar_Les ARCHIBALD KIDDER 
Mrs. Henry P. KippER 

Mrs. Henry Parsons KIncG 
Mrs. ABRAHAM KosHLAND 
Mrs. ALEXANDER H. Lapp 
Mrs. Horatio A. Lams 

Mrs. Henry G. LapHam 

Mrs. Joun LAavaALlE 


Mrs. Georce LEE 

Mrs. JAmMEs STEARNS LEE 
Mrs. Rosert A. LEESON 
Mrs. Louis Leviseur 
Mrs. Davin M. LitrLe 
Mrs. J. Lovet Littie 
Mrs. Harris LIVERMORE 
Mrs. Percivat LomMBARD 
Mrs. LinpsLey Lorinc 
Mrs. Witi1aM E. Lorine 


Mrs. Guy LowELui 

Mrs. Ratpo Lowe. 

Mrs. Matruew Luce 

Mrs. ArTHuR LyMAN 

Mrs. Georce H. Lyman 

Mrs. Henry LyMan 

Mrs. Cuar.es E. Mason 

Miss Fanny P. Mason 

Mrs. Ricumonp MayosMITH 
Mrs. Witiiam L. McKee 
Mrs. WiLi14m Gorpon MEAns 
Mrs. James Jackson Minot, Jr. 
Mrs. Lewis Kennepy Morse 
Mrs. Rosert C. Morse 

Mrs. Everetr Morss 

Mrs. J. Lorprop MotLey 
Miss Katuarine P. Motiey 
Mrs. THomas Mo t-ey, Jr. 
Mrs. Guy Murcuie 

Mrs. T. Morris Murray 
Mrs. Cuauncey C. Nasu 
Mrs. Witi1amM G. NiIcKERSON 
Mrs. FREDERIC RussELL Nourse 
Mrs. RicHarD OLNEY 

Mrs. Witi1amM Dana OrcuTT 
Mrs. Vitrorio ORLANDINI 
Mrs. Joun Bryant PAInE 
Mrs. Ropert Treat PAINE, 2ND 
Mrs. Wiix1aM A. PAINE 

Mrs. JAMEs A. PaRKER 

Mrs. J. HarLteston PARKER 
Mrs. Henry PARKMAN 

Mrs. Henry Parkman, Jr. 
Mrs. Haro_p PEaBopy 

Mrs. Rospert Forses PERKINS 
Mrs. Tuomas S. PERRY 

Mrs. WILL1AM Graves PERRY 
Mrs. James J. PHELAN 





[67] 


Mrs. Witxi1AMm Sturcis H. LotrHrop 


Mrs. Dubey L. Pickman 
Mrs. Epwarp M. PickMan 
Mrs. Benjamin F. Pirman 
Mrs. ALBERT A. Pope 

Mrs. ALEXANDER S. PorTER 
Mrs. Joun R. Post 

Mrs. Cuar.es B. Prince 

Mrs. ArTuur WALLACE RICE 
Mrs. Homer B. RicHARDSON 
Mrs. WILi1aM B. Rocers 
Mrs. FrepDerIcK Pace Royce 
Mrs. Benjamin F. W. RussEvy 
Mrs. Davin W. Russet 

Mrs. Ricuarp S. RussEtu 
Mrs. Joun L. SALTonsTALL 
Mrs. LEVERETT SALTONSTALL 
Mrs. Puiuip L. SaLTOoNsTALL 
Mrs. Puitip L. SattonsTAtt, Jr. 
Mrs. RicHarD SALTONSTALL 
Miss ALICE SARGENT 

Mrs. DaniEL SARGENT 

Mrs. Cuar-es P. SEARLES 
Mrs. Davin Sears 

Mrs. J. Montcomery SEars 
Mrs. Puiip S. SEARS 

Mrs. RicuarD D. Sears 

Mrs. Quincy A. SHAW 

Mrs. Rosert Gou.p SHAw, 2ND 
Mrs. Henry Pickerinc SMITH 
Mrs. Ropman Paut SNELLING 
Mrs. Horace H. Sou.e 

Mrs. Pui.ip L. SPALDING 

Mrs. J. Lewis STACKPOLE 
Mrs. Rosert H. STEvEnNson, Jr. 
Mrs. Puitip STOCKTON 

Mrs. Ga.en L. STONE 

Mrs. Ricuarp C. Storey 

Mrs. James Jackson StTorrow, JR. 
Mrs. Georce H. Swirt 

Mrs. Freperick H. Tappan 
Mrs. Tuomas C. THACHER 
Mrs. BayarD THAYER 

Mrs. Joun Exior THAYER 
Mrs. Joun Exior THayveEr, Jr. 
Mrs. Isaac Ranp THOMAS 


Mrs. ALDEN A. THORNDIKE 
Mrs. Aucustus THORNDIKE 
Mrs. Joun L. THornDIKE 

Mrs. Bernarp W. TRaFFrorD 
Mrs. Hersert A. TUCKER 
Mrs. Cuartes N. TurnBuLi 
Mrs. Georce W. VAILLANT 
Mrs. Henry C. VaucHAN 

Mrs. ALEXANDER F. WAaDsworTH 
Mrs. Wiii1am Austin WADSworTH 
Mrs. Etior WapsworTH 

Mrs. NaTHANIEL U. WALKER 
Mrs. Guy WarINnG 

Mrs. Rocer S. WarNER 

Mrs. Epwarp R. WarREN 
Mrs. Fiske WARREN 

Mrs. SamMuEL D. WarREN 

Mrs. Dona.tp C. Watson 

Mrs. Lesire C. Weap 

Mrs. AnDrew G. WEBSTER 
Mrs. Epwin S. WEBSTER 

Mrs. A. Winpsor WELD 

Mrs. BernarD Corrin WELD 
Mrs. C. Minot WELD 

Mrs. ArtTHuR W. WELLINGTON 
Mrs. Georce S. WEST 

Mrs. RicHarD WHEATLAND 
Mrs. Epwarp C. WHEELER, JR. 
Mrs. Cuarces J. WHITE 

Mrs. Frank O. WHITE 

Mrs. JasPpER WHITING 

Mrs. WiLi14m WHITMAN 

Mrs. Wiii1am Wuirman, Jr. 
Miss Mary E. WIL.tiAms 

Mrs. Moses WILLIAMS 

Mrs. ArTHUR WINSLOW 

Mrs. Cameron McR. Winstow 
Mrs. Cuartes G. WinsLow 
Mrs. KeEnnarD WINSOR 

Mrs. FREDERICK WINTHROP 
Mrs. Rocer Wo.cotTr 

Mrs. SamuEL Huntincton Wotcotr 
Mrs. Josepu F. Woops 

Mrs. Puitip W. Wrenn 

Mrs. Epcar N: WRIGHTINGTON 


[ 68 ] 


Mr. Epwarp G. ApAam 

Mrs. Gorpon ALLEN 

Mr. W. G. R. ALLEN 

Mr. H. M. Atpricu 

Mrs. Rosert H. Bancrorr 
Mr. B. A. BEHREND 

Mr. H. F. BicELtow 

Mrs. ArtTHur W. BLAKE 
Mrs. Cuartes K. Botton 
Mr. F. J. BraDLeE 

Mr. Harotp S. BraprorpD 
Mrs. J. Epwarp Brooks 
Mrs. Downinc Potrer Brown 
Mr. Hersert W. C. Browne 
Mr. G. WintHrop Brown 
Mr. Joun T. Burnetr 

Mr. GeorceE H. Carter 

Mr. and Mrs. Rosert J. Crarx 
Mr. Hermann F. Ciarke 
Dr. A. A. CLirr 

Mr. T. JeErreERson CooLipGE 
Mrs. S. V. R. Crossy 

Mrs. DeForest DAniELSON 
Mrs. Georce DIKE 

Mr. GeorceE Francis Dow 
Mr. C. F. Drake 

Mr. Natuaniet F. Emmons 
Mr. S. Prescott Fay 


Mr. AnD Mrs. Georce R. FEARING 


Tue First Cuyurcu 1n Boston 
Mr. ALLAN ForBeEs 

Mr. Henry Forp 

Mr. Ho.tuts FrRencH 

Mr. Stancey G. Frencu 

Mrs. Henry Copitey GREENE 
HarvarD COLLEGE 

Mr. ArtHur H. Haywarp 
Miss Bertua E. Hewitt 

Mrs. EpwarpbD Bur.incaME HILL 
Mrs. James L. HuntTincTon 
Miss Carouine G, JEWELL 
Mr. Homer Eaton Keyes 
KILLINGLY Farm 

Mr. Hersert Lawton 

Mr. J. Lovery Litr.e 

Miss Laura R. LitTTLe 

Mr. anp Mrs. Harry V. Lone 


LENDERS 


Mrs. Linps.ty Lorinc 

Miss HELEN Loring 

Mr. WILi1AmM H. Mayo 

Mrs. J. Grarron Minor 

Miss ADELINE MorratT 

Mr. JosepH Morrity 

Mrs. H. M. Montacue 

Rev. GLtenn Tittey Morse 
Mrs. C. L. Norton 

Mrs. ATHERTON Noyes 

Mr. Wattace Nutrinc 

Mrs. Harrison Gray Oris 
Mr. Cuartes H. Parker 

Rr. Rev. James D. Perry 
Rev. Aspsot PETERSON 

Mr. DupDLey PickKMAN 

Rev. Assot PETERSON 

Mr. Haro.tp Pirman 

Mrs. James Otis PorTER 
Mrs. KaTHERINE T. Prescotr 
Mr. Beverty RANTOUL 

Mr. E. H. R. Revere 

Mr. SHERWOOD ROLLINS 

Mr. Harry B. Russe_u 

Mr. B. F. W. Russe_y 

Mrs. RicuarD M. SALTONSTALL 
Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 

Dr. anD Mrs. F. C. Ssatruck 
Mr. Henry L. SHatruck 

Mr. Epcar B. SHERRILL 

Mr. Henry D. SLEEPER 

Mrs. Henry PICKERING SMITH 
Mr. and Mrs. Puitip L. SPALDING 
Mr. and Mrs. Joun C. Sprine 
Dr. anp Mrs. W. F. TEMPLE 
Dr. AucustTus THORNDIKE 
Mr. anD Mrs. Henry G. VauGHan 
Mrs. Etuet A. B. WALLING 

Mr. Perry WALTON 

Mrs. Epwarp R. Warren 

Mr. WIinsLtow WARREN 

Mr. Georce P. WInsHIP 

Dr. anD Mrs. Cuartes J. WHITE 
Mrs. Parker W. WHITTEMORE 
Mrs. Witt1am WuHim™an, Jr. 
Mr. Frank Woop 

Mrs. JosepH T. Woops 





[69 ] 


DEALERS 


BicELOW KENNARD Co. Louis JosEPH 

Boston ANTIQUE SHOP Katrina Kipper 

Brooks REED GALLERY Rupo.py Pauty 

TERESA V. CAREY I. Sack 

Casson GALLERIES SHREVE, Crump & Low 
FLAYDERMAN & KAUFMAN LynbDE SULLIVAN 

G. C. GEBELEIN HELEN TRAYES 
GoopsPeEeEpb’s Book SHop STEPHEN Van RENSSELAER 
E. C. Howe Rosert C. Vose 


[70] 


ADVERTISERS 








— 
cA Lone Step orward tn 
SHEETINGS 


E completed, last Spring, a $5,000,000 Mill, designed and 

erected by the most skilful engineers; installed the newest 
and most modern machinery; and now weave, bleach and finish, 
in our own factories, Sheeting, Sheets and Pillow Cases that are, in 
every respect, the latest achievement of the Sheeting industry. 


Instead of adopting old standards of construction, when hand 
tub washing was in vogue, we have developed Sheetings that are 
woven to successfully withstand not only ordinary wear, but 
modern mechanical laundries. 


“Pacific’and Truth” Sheets 


are the newest of the new, in every respect, and are as far superior 
to the Sheetings of our grandfathers, as the Telephone is superior 
to the old-time office boy; the Aeroplane to the balloon; or the 
Automobile to the stage coach. 


We make these Sheetings, Sheets and Pillow Cases in two 
constructions, named: “PACIFIC” and “TRUTH” and the 


excellence of each of these is guaranteed in every respect. 


PACIFIC MILLS 


Lawrence, Mass. Dover, N. H. CoLumsia, S. C. Lyman, S. C. 


LAWRENCE & CO. 
Selling Agents 





Boston New York PuHILADELPHIA St.Louis Cuicaco BALTIMORE SAN FRANCISCO 








[73 ] 








ANTIQUES 
eA Monthly Publication 


Now in its fourth year, the magazine ANTIQUES 


is the active influence behind the present widespread 





interest in collecting. Specialized, authoritative, yet 
entertaining. Articles on American and European 
furniture, ceramics, glass, textiles, metal, firearms, 
early American paintings, prints, old books, etc. 
Current comment. Questions concerning antiques 


intelligently answered. 





Attractively illustrated advertisements of antiques; 
classified columns for wants and offerings for sale; 


alphabetical list of dealers by states and towns, 





50 CENTS THE Copy $4.00 THE YEAR 


Send $1.00 for special 3 months trial 


ok 





ANTIQUES, 683 -Atlantic Avenue 
BOSTON 








[74] 














Pioneers 


In the Electrical Development 
of this Country 


SEASONED BONDS AND 
PREFERRED STOCKS 


Offerings and full information upon request 


STONE & WEBSTER 


INCORPORATED 


147 Milk Street 
NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO 























HAROLD S. BRADFORD 


Old ShipPictures "Ng, aj eAlso 
Engravings + Etchings Gay Signed Prints of Simon, 


eNMezzotints and 


eH, ZLuloaga and 


eAguatints oH Je, (oussens 


75s BOYLSTON STREET 


TEL.: Coptey 7739M 


Geo. NO MeMahon 
ANTIQUES 


Specializes in 
SILHOUETTES 
HALL LANTERNS 
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COLORED LAMPS 
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é 


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You as to Value and Age 


33 CHARLES STREET, BosTon 


Boston 


Wms oKs MacKay Go; 


INCORPORATED 


cAuctioneers and Appraisers 


Collections of antiques 
and all kinds of house- 
hold furnishings solic- 
ited for sale at auction 
or bought outright for 
cash. 


Catalogue sales a spec- 
ialty. Appraisals for in- 
heritance tax, insurance 
and other purposes. 





Some choice antiques al- 
ways on exhibition and Ye Olde Province 
for sale House Gate 


7 Bosworth Street BOSTON, MASS. 


Telephone Liberty 3194 


























Of course! 


Send your Pepperell Sheets 
to the laundry 


ee 
Ws: LIKE to wash Pepperell Sheets,” said a prominent 
laundry-owner the other day. “They’re not full of filler 
and chemicals like some sheets; we can wash them and 
send them home smooth and beautiful as a fine hand- 
kerchief.” 

That’s one reason why Pepperells have a reputation 
for oufwearing, instead of wearing out! 

The chief reason, of course, is that good, honest, 
selected cotton is woven into the best sheet that can be 
made for the money. If you pay the Pepperell price 
for anything else, you mustn’t expect to get Pepperell 
texture and wear. 


Heke acl ok, Resksleale 
sueetine of heeds Heit ae Ale 


Made by the Peprerett Mrc.Co., 160StateSt., Boston, Mass, 








Mills at Bivperorp, Maine, and OpEtika, ALABAMA 


Buss, Fasyan © Co., Selling Agents, New York and Boston 





[77] 











[' you know your wants, their 
complete satisfaction depends 
only upon your patience in exam- 
ining our enormous stock. If you 
are uncertain you will find our 
showroom a revelation of unsus- 
pected possibilities in early Amer- 
ican antiques. 


FLAYDERMAN & KAUFMAN 


Furniture 
68 CHARLES 


Glass : Pewter : China : Brass 
StrEET Boston, MassacHuseEtTTs 














HYANNIS, CAPE COD 


ON’T you come in 

and see our Rare 
Antiques, Early Glass, 
Pewter, Hooked Rugs, 
Currier Prints, Imported 
Novelties? 


Winter Address: 
HELEN TRAYES 
Overlook 
Chatham, Mass. 


Gifts for Christmas 


We carry a full line of Cigars, 
Cigarettes and Smokers’ Articles in 
our stores at 36 Kilby Street, and 
44 Bromfield Street. 


Cw) 


We particularly call ladies’ at- 
tention to our Bromfield Street 
store, which is in the shopping 
district, and where every attention 


will be shown lady customers. 


ow 


Charles B. Perkins Co. 





























eA ‘Rare Old Queen Anne Walnut 
(fina (abinet 
All the year round I have on sale in my galleries 


RARE ANTIQUES 


LOUIS JOSEPH 


381 Boylston Street 


Antiques Boston, Mass. and at 
with a written guarantee LONDON 











ROBERT CC. 3V OSE GALE Rail 


(ESTABLISHED 1841) 



















Old and Modern Masters 
Ship Portraits 
Carrig-Rohane Carved Frames 


boy 


55:93 OWL Sal) Nees Re bed COPLEY SQUARE 
BOSTON 








Bld An erican Established 1890 Tel. Liberty a 
Silver is scarce Richard Nichols (9. 


Artistic Picture Frames 
OUR Ancestors were 


thoughtful and had PaINTINGS AND OLD Prints 
good silver made that was 
worthy to hand down to 
their descendants. How 


OLD Frames REGILDED 


A full line of hand carved frames 


much of this rare quality é 
of silver are you having 
made to make some one Drop in and look around 


happy in the future ? 
FIRST QUALITY WORK 


GEORGE C. GEBELEIN Low RENT Low Prices 
79 Chestnut Street 
BOSTON, MASS. 


We specialize in framing old prints 


17 BROMFIELD STREET 
Silversmith of the Old School of American 


A ELEVATOR 
Silversmiths E. C. THomas 1 FLIGHT 

















[80] 




















ANTIQUES 


UR ANTIQUE ROOAC has at all times an interesting 

exhibition of old furniture, glass and other things for col- 
lection. In addition to collectors’ pieces are interesting sam- 
ples of early craftsmanship which will harmonize admirably 
with modern surroundings. 


We invite you to call and examine our collection. 


JORDAN MARSH COMPANY 
cAntique ‘Room 
BOSTON MASSACHUSETTS 























BROOKS REED GALLERY, Jc. 


NOW LOCATED AT 
22 NEWBURY STREET, BOSTON 


PAINTINGS oR ANTIQUES 


H1. ‘R. Dalton 


Fred. G. Church @2.G@or 


(ompliments of 


Insurance of Every 


eA Friend 


Description 


40 BROAD STREET 
BOSTON, MASS. 


Telephone Main 1630 








[82 ] 























(apital oN Surplus 


$3,000,000 Bey) $3,500,000 


YourAre Cordially Lnvrted 


to visit our new Main Office at the corner of 





State and Congress Streets 


BOSTON 


Its architectural treatment and furnishings are reminiscent of 
early Colonial counting houses and we believe your visit will 
prove interesting and enjoyable. 


Those contemplating a change in, or addition to, their present 
banking connection are invited to consider our unusual facilities 
for rendering complete and satisfactory service. 


State Street Trust Company 


Cor. STATE AND CONGRESS STREETS, Boston, Mass. 


Massachusetts Ave. Office 
CornER Mass. AVENUE AND 
Boy.ston STREET 


Copley Square Office 


581 Boyvitston STREET 


Safe Deposit Uaults at All Offices 
Member Federal ‘Reserve System 








| 





[83 ] 





oo 








Read it for information 
Use it for advertising 


The Antique page every Saturday in the Boston Evening 
Transcript is made up of authentic stories and adver- 
tisements of reliable dealers and individuals. 


May we send you a sample copy 
with our subscription and advertising rates 


Boston £bvening Cranscript 


324 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. 


Antiques Department 


PACKING MOVING 


STORING _ SHIPPING 
PACKING 
We pack China, Bric-a-Brac, 
Silverware, Books, Wedding 
Gifts and Household Goods. 
MOVING 
Specialize in House to House 
and Long Distance Moving. 
STORING 


Place at your disposal the most 
Modern Warehouses for the 
Storage of Household Goods, 
Pianos, etc. 

SHIPPING 


Household Furniture and Office 
Equipment shipped to all parts 
of the World. 


46 Bromfield Street 


Phones: Main 4771 South Boston 3932 





Tel. LIB erty 6600 


Henry E. Russevy SaMuEL B. REED 
Josepy B. Russet, Jr. Geratp H. Noonan 


Rosert J. DunKLE 
BayarD TUCKERMAN, JR. 
Wa. Gorpon Means 


Obrion, ‘Russell & (0. 


Jusurance 
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION 


115 Broapway 
New York 
Tel. Rector 9877 


108 Water STREET 
Boston 8 
Tel. Main 8760 
Representing 
MATHER & CO. 


PHILADELPHIA 























Ssrael Sack 


Early American Furniture 


dhe ighest Grade 


Se -ogeC ARLE StS by BOS LON 























[85 ] 















English 


SeEvEN WaLNutT STREET 


Antiques 









Boston, MassacHUSETTS 


ISS CRIMMINS has an interesting and extensive collection 

of CHOICE ANTIQUES which, during the past summer, 

she personally gathered in out-of-the-way places in England and 
Scotland. These she will be glad to show by appointment. 


Telephone Haymarket 6466 


Gwo 
Furniture: Georgian, Queen Anne, Facobean, and Elizabethan. 
Pictures: Paintings, Prints, Needlework, and Pictures on Glass. 
NEEDLEWORK: Petit-point, Facobean Bedspreads, Samplers, etc. 
TextTILes: Damasks, Brocades, Glazed Chintz, Shawls, ete. 
Tea Sets: Worcester, Spode, Sunderland, Liverpool, Lowestoft, etc. 
LusTERWARE: Silver, Silver Resist, Copper, Pink. 
GW 
GeorGIAN SILVER, SHEFFIELD PLATE, JEWELRY, TAPESTRIES, Mirrors, 
Grass, Pewrer, Brass, CopPEr, efc. 





‘Picture Framing High Grade Paintings 
by 
Bld Style OLD AND MODERN MASTERS 


Mezzotints - Engravings 
Veneer Moulding for 


Currier and Other Prints Etchings 
Birds-Eye and Curly Maple A 
Frames for the proper EXHIBITION 
framing of old Prints, Docu- OF PAINTINGS OF 
ments, Samplers, etc. HUNTING DOGS 
by Perctvat RossEau 
Mirror and Picture Frames Regilded and 
and Restored DECORATIVE LANDSCAPES 
ie by FREDERIC M. Grant 
On View Through December 
HALEY & STEELE 
109 Sr. James Ave. THE CASSON GALLERIES 
at corner of Clarendon St. 575 Boylston Street, Copley Square 
BOSTON, MASS. VISITORS WELCOME 








[ 86] 

















The 
National Rockland Bank 


of Boston 


ORIGINAL CHARTER 1853 
(Capital $1,000,000 Surplus $2,000,000 


FreDERICK W. Ruac, President 
ANSELM L. Bacon, Vice-President Harrie I. Brett, Cashier 
Rosert B. Ruac, Vice-President Gorpon M. Crowe, Asst. Cashier 
Wiiiiam N. Kenyon, Vice-President E. CLARENCE Hovey, JR., Asst. Cashier 


‘Directors 
Freperic W. Ruce Ernest L. Ruerer Henry G. LapHam 
Wi.iraM A. Gaston Vicror A. HEATH Rarpy E. THompson 
R. Ermer TownsENnD WILLIAM J. CARLIN BayarpD TucKERMAN 
AwnsELo L. Bacon Joun K. Howarp Joun Gaston 
Sranvey M. Botster Rocer Amory Cuar_es E. Honces, Jr. 
Netson Curtis Joun E. Tuaver, Jr. Puiiip L. SALTONSTALL 

Cw 


MAIN OFFICE, 50 CONGRESS ST., BOSTON 
Roxbury Office, 2343 Washington Street 


(Directly opposite Dudley Terminal) 


Safe Deposit Vaults at Both Offices 








[87] 








flere illustrated is a section of our window. It will give you some idea of the 


variety of our stock. Only a visit can give you an adequate idea of its great 
extent. 


E. C. HOWE 73 Newbury Street Boston 


Gregory & Brown Co. 


Importers 8 Interior Decorators 


(ompliments of 


eA Friend 


REPRODUCTIONS OF 
CoLontAL Papers 


6 Hamitton PLAcE 
Boston, Mass. 
Opposite Park Street Church 

















[ 88 ] 











Bliss, Fabyan & Company 


Boston New York Chicago 


San Francisco St. Louis 











[89] 














Raymond & Whitcomb Co. 


165 Tremont Street, Boston, Massachusetts 


are official agents for all of the principal steamship 
lines of the world—trans-Atlantic, trans-Pacific, 
Mediterranean, South American, Oriental, Carib- 
bean, Coast-to-Coast, etc. 


We sell steamship tickets at regular tariff rates, 
making absolutely no charge for our services. 


Our staff of experienced steamship men can lay 
before you in short order the routes, rates, sched- 
ules and cabin-plans of all the lines, and can give 
you expert, unbiased advice. 


By consulting us you can save an immense amount 
of tedious “‘shopping round.” 


When You Want to Sell Rudolph P. Pauly 
Of Diy sAMIG es =e seo 


Antiques 
DANIEL F. MAGNER 
Fountain Square or 
HINGHAM 
32 CHARLES STREET 
Corner of Chestnut St. 
TELEPHONE 0632 BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS 





[90] 























(onsider the 
Gillette 
Jor (hristmas 


You give him a lifetime of shaving com- 
fort when you give him a Gillette Satety 


Razor. 


On Christmas morning and every morn- 
ing he will be sure of a smooth, clean 


shave. 


for Her 


to enhance the attractiveness of 
bobbed hair and to keep smooth 


the under-arm. 


For the Flapper bob For the shingle bob 




















Queen Anne Cottage 


Queen Anne Corners ACCORD, MASSACHUSETTS 
Hine Antiques All Pieces Guaranteed 





Antiques The SmartGift of This Season: 


. THE DUNHILL 
Old T irearms | 
yale AUD UNIQUE LIGH Tie 


cA Gift always 
Appreciated 


€ A DUNHILL 
PIPE 


Agents: 


Potter & ‘Rogers 


Stephen Van Rensselaer Cor. STATE and DEVONSHIRE Streets 
The Wilson Tavern Shop BOSTON 
Peterborough, N. H. Telephone, Cong. 5963 








[92] 











ARTHUR L. RACE i 
MANAGING DIRECTOR 


ide a 


SN, See. 


THE PLAZA 
\\ FRED STERRY PResivent 
N JoHn D. OWEN Manacer 


X\, NEW YORK Lo 


NEW YORK _ 
| ANDBOSTON | 
_— 














Hear Del!!! 


Gi Piso be manyrare & curi- 


ous olde thyngs to be seen 


Field & (Cowles 


at ye Boston Antique Shop at 
ye Sign of ye Chariot & Key Insurance 
on Beacon St. ct number 59 & 
near where it Crosseth Charles 
St. Do not fail to visit this 
goodly gathering of desirable 


gear for ye decoration & 40 Broap STREET 


furnishing of your 
Boston 
houses. 


or Main 7880 
Ve are welcome! 


















BIGELOW! 
KENNARDc& 


would be glad to add to their 
collection of old silver marked 


from 








John Bigelow 
John Bigelow & Co. 
Bigelow & Brother 


A FRIEND 


Bigelow & Brothers 









Information as to where silver 
so marked could be obtained 
would be welcomed at 


SIIWASHINGTONST 











[94] 





a 


€ 


AETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY 
ACCIDENT AND LIABILITY DEPARTMENT 


AETNA CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANY 


AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY 


OF HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT 
MORGAN B. BRAINARD, President 








All Exhibits are insured under 
Fine Arts Policy 


issued by 





AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY 


oF HartTrorpD, Conn. 


ARTHUR W. BURKE, General -Agent 





40 BROAD STREET BOSTON, MASS. 
Telephone Congress 7486 


es rede ll A a hl SM RAS Rec. anna Ds 


[95] 











An Indispensable Book for the 
Collector 


COLONIAL 


FURNITURE 
OF NEW ENGLAND 


By Irvine W. Lyon 


This beautiful and justly celebrated 
book, for many years the standard for 
collectors, has now been re-issued with 
over one hundred heliotype illustrations 
which are in themselves an adequate 
history of Old New England furniture. 
These pictures and the clear, detailed 
text make the book invaluable for the 
amateur collector. 


Price, $20.00. Postfree 


HOUGHTON MIFFLIN Co. 


2 Park St. Boston 


The C.B. SWIFT GO. 


Roserr L, Lirr.ewaue, President 
Interior Decorations 
Antiques and Reproductions 


Manufacturers and Repairers of 
Fine Furniture 
Our Specialty—Repairing and Refinishing 
Antique Furniture 


19 Charles Street 


ee Boston 
Telephone, Haymarket 1427 


(ompliments of 
cA Friend 

















CARL H.SKINNER 
Diamond Fewelry 


Pearls 


~ 
300 BOYLSTON STREET 


AT ARLINGTON 


BOSTON 





Bonds of the Highest Grade 
Compliments of 
R. M. Kimball 


and 
P. A. Kimball 





Harris, Horbes & Go. 


Incorporated 


Harris Forbes Building 
24 Federal St., Boston 


Bei 








[97] 








The 


Queen Anne Studios 
739 Boylston Street 


Fourth Floor 





“Antiques of the Highest Grade’ 





On Exhibition 


Eary Oak Dresser RECENTLY 
PuRCHASED IN ENGLAND 


DOLL & RICHARDS 
BOSTON 





Important 


(ompliments of 


Paintings 
Water Colors 
and Sculpture 





eA Friend 


Fine Prints 


ow) 


Expert Restoration of 


Paintings and Prints 
Correct Framing 























App reclation 


The committee wish to acknowledge the generosity 
of seven friends who have contributed each 


a full page of advertising 


€ 








[99] 

















COLLECTORS AND OTHER TRAVELLERS 
IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES OFTEN FACE 
EMERGENCIES REQUIRING UNFORSEEN 
LARGE EXPENDITURES. 


AN ADEQUATE LETTER OF CREDIT 

UPON BANKERS KNOWN THE WORLD OVER 
IS VHE SURES,” RESOURCE ON 

SUCH OCCASIONS: 


WE SUPPLY SUCH LEITERS OF CREDIT 
ISSUED BY J.P. MORGAN & CO. PAYABLE 
AT THE HOLDER’S OPTION 

IN FRANCS, DOLLARS AND STERLING. 


CHARLES HEAD & CO., (FOUNDED 1877) 
84 STATE ST., BOSTON; 52 BROADWAY, NEW 
YORK. 








[ 100 ] 








iN 


McGrath-Sherrill Press, Boston 














LOAN EXHIBITION OF 
EARLY AMERICAN FURNITURE 


AND THE 


DECORATIVE CRAFTS 


ADDENDA 


PARK SQUARE BUILDING, BOSTON 





ADDENDA 


*1000 FOOT WARMER 
*1001 CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE 


i TIN SCONCES Garner ore ohne C Sonne 
1008 GEORGE WASHINGTON Owner, Mr. F. J. Bradlee 


Painted by Trumbull, 1780, Engraved by V. Green, Published 
Jan. 15, 1781. Mezzotint. 


1009 CORNER CUPBOARD OF PINE, Rustic Base 


1011 SAMPLER, 1817 Owner, Mrs. J. Homer Pierce 


Wrought by Anna Clymes. 


1012 BUREAU OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mrs, Nathaniel Thayer 


Owned by Paul Revere. 


1013 LOCKET, With Frame of Pearls Owner, Mrs. Robert H. Bancroft 


Enclosing a lock of George Washington’s hair. 


1014 PASTEL OF EBEN SYMS Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 


“Three years and seven months.” 


1015 FRENCH CHAIR, Original frame Owner, Mrs. Robert H. Bancroft 


Owned and used by George Washington, who gave it to his friend 
Col. Maynadier, who in turn, gave it to Mrs. Catherine Milligan, 
great aunt of present owner. 


*1016 BONNET BOX OF PINE 


Top decorated with carving after Friesian style. 


*1017 CHEST OF OAK 
Wrought iron handles. 


*1018 CHEST OF OAK AND PINE 


Sunburst carving. 


*1019 CARVER CHAIR 
With double spindle. 


*1020 CRADLE OF PINE 
With turned posts, panelled sides. 


*1021 PEWTER PORRINGER 
Initialed M C, used at Mt. Vernon. 


Pieces starred (*) are for sale and prices may be obtained from the Committee. 


*1022 
*1029 


1030 


1031 


1032 
1033 


1034 


1035 
1036 
1037 
1039 


1040 
1041 


1042 


1043 


1044 


1045 


1046 


1047 


1048 


1049 


HOOKED RUGS 


WALL PAPER, Independence Hall Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 


QUILT OF PATCHWORK 
AND APPLIQUE Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 


“Rising sun,’ surrounded by floral design. 


PILLOW COVER 


THREE KNIVES AND FORKS OF PEWTER. Owner, Mrs. C. L. Norton 
With horn handles. 


SMALL CHEST OF OAK, circa 1700 Owner, Mr. Henry D. Sleeper 
Panelled drawers and original Brasses. 

TABLE Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 

TRESTLE CANDLE STAND Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 

CARVER CHAIR Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 

LIVERPOOL PITCHER Owner, Dr. G. H. Francis 
(Hunting scenes by Bewick.) 

BLACK AND WHITE BEDSPREAD Owner, Dr. G. H. Francis 

PETIT POINT Owner, Mrs. H. V. Long 


Crude drawings of Adam and Eve. 


SILK PICTURE GEORGE WASHINGTON 


ON PORCH AT MT. VERNON Owner, Mrs. Robert Cushman 
SILK PICTURE, SIR WILLIAM 

BEECHEY Owner, Mrs. Robert Cushman 
CANDLE-WICK BEDSPREAD Owner, Mrs. Robert Cushman 


With a Spread Eagle design used at Mt. Vernon. 


CANDLE-WICK BEDSPREAD Owner, Mrs. Robert Cushman 
Initialed M C used at Mt. Vernon. 


PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH CHEST 
ON TRESTLES Owner Mr. H. Lawton 


SILVER PITCHER Owner, Mrs. J. Edward Brooks 
Maker—Paul Revere. 


MINIATURE PORRINGER Owner, Rev. Abbot Peterson 
(Richard Lee.) 


SHIP’S LAMP Owner, Rev. Abbot Peterson 


1050 


1052 


*1053 


1054 
1055 
1056 


1057 


1058 


1059 
1062 


1063 


1064 


1065 


*1066 
*1067 


1068 


1069 


1070 


1071 
1072 


1073 


DESK OF BURLED WALNUT | Owner, Mr. F. L. Dunne 
With turnip feet and tear drop handles. 


THE WILLARD CAN Owner, Mr. Philip L. Spalding 
Maker, Samuel Minott. 


PASTEL OF REV. THOMAS LYALL 
By John Singleton Copley. 


THREE PRINTS OF CONSTITUTION 
AND GUERRIERE Owner, Charles B. Barnes 
Painted by M. Corne, engraved J. R. Smith, 1812 


CHRISTENING BASIN OF PEWTER Owner, E. A. Hubener 
HOUR GLASS Owner, E. A. Huebener 


FOUR CHIPPENDALE CHAIRS 


OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Long 
BASIN OF PEWTER Owner, Mr. Valentine Hollingsworth 
PLATE OF PEWTER Owner, Mr. Valentine Hollingsworth 


Maker, Thomas Danforth 


PLATE OF PEWTER Owner, Mr. Valentine Hollingsworth 
Maker, Frederic Barrett 


HOOKED RUGS 


MR. SAMSON LEVY Owner, Mrs. Robert H. Bancroft 
By Sully 


Great great uncle of present owner. 


MRS. SAMSON LEVY (Sarah Goates) Owner, Mrs. Robert H. Bancroft 


By Sully 
RED AND WHITE BEDSPREAD Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 
SILVER SUGAR BOWL AND PITCHER Owner, Mrs. E. R. Warren 
LADY IN BROWN Owner, Mrs. Henry B. Cabot 


By John Singleton Copley 


1074 


1075 


1076 


1077 


1078 


1079 
*1080 
*1081 
*1082 


*1083 


*1084 


*1085 


*1086 
*1087 
*1088 


*1089 


*1090 


*1091 


1092 


ABIGAIL BROMFIELD Owner, Mrs. Henry B. Cabot 
(First wife of Daniel Dennison Rogers.) 
By John Singleton Copley 


SILVER HILT SWORD Owner, Mr. Paul Hamlen 
Mount by Andrew Tyler. 


MIRROR Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 
With frame of Maple. 


TWO PIECES OF EMBROIDERY Owner, Mrs. Henry P. Smith 


Owner, Rev. Glenn Tilley Morse 
a_ Brass Candlestick. 
b Blue and White Peg Lamp. 
c Pickwick. 


PAIR OF KNIFE CASES Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
TABLE OF MAHOGANY, Chippendale period 

MARTHA WASHINGTON CHAIR 

TABLE OF MAHOGANY, Duncan Phyffe 


TABLE OF PINE 
Crossed supports, shelf, trestle type. 


TABLE OF PINE 
With turned legs and stretcher. 


PAIR OF CHIPPENDALE CHAIRS 


COLLECTION OF 44 PIECES OF PEWTER 
LOW BOY 


CASE OF OAK 
With glass bottles. 


SHIP MERCURY 


Water color, artist unknown. 


TWO COLORED PRINTS 
a Country club. 
6 Smoking club. 


FIFTEEN HOOKED RUGS 


PORTRAIT OF REV. JOSHUA GEE 
By Smibert 


1093 


*1094 


1095 


1097 
*1098 


*1099 
1100 


1101 


1102 


1103 
1104 


*1105 
1106 


1108 


1109 


1110 


1111 


COURT SWORD 
Silver mount by W. Cowell (Boston 1682-1736.) 


HOOKED RUGS 


JOSHUA GORE DAVIS Owner, Mrs. A. D. Walling 


A miniature. 
TRAY OF MAHOGANY Owner, Mr. Hollis French 
EARLY AMERICAN SLIP WARE (56 pieces) 


CHINA (nine pieces) 


SILVER BARREL PITCHER Owner, Mr. Samuel G. King 
Maker, Paul Revere 


BLOCK FRONT LOW BOY OF 
WALNUT Owner, Mr. Samuel G. King 
Cabriole legs. 


HIGH CHEST OF DRAWERS OF MAPLE Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
Six turned legs. 
HAT BOX OF OLD WALL PAPER Owner, Mrs. Gordon Allen 
SIXTEEN PIECES OF AMERICAN 
PEWTER Owner, Mrs. Mary M. Sampson 
COLLECTION OF ENGLISH PEWTER Owner, Mrs. F. M. Nichols 
PAIR OF FLINT LOCK PISTOLS Owner, Mr. William Greene 


Used at Bunker Hill. 


TABLE OF MAPLE Owner, Mrs. George R. Fearing 
With cross stretchers. 


ARTICLES 1109-1121 
Loaned by Mr. Henry D. Sleeper 


TRUNK OF TOOLED LEATHER 
Lined with contemporary toile printed with episodes of Washing- 
ton’s life. . 


EMBROIDERED PICTURE 
Paul Jones at the Tomb of Washington 


WALKING STICK OF WHALEBONE 
With different rope knots at the top. 


1112 
1113 
1115 


1116 


1117 


1118 


1034 


1119 


1120 
1121 


1122 


1123 


1124 


1125 


1126 


1127 


WALKING STICK 
ONE PAIR OF VASES OF WHALEBONE 
SWIFT OF WHALEBONE 


SOFA, Sheraton Period 
Eight feet long, made in Portsmouth, N. H. 


UMBRELLA 
With handle of incidents of Washington’s life. 


BAND BOX OF BONE 


Engraved with miscellaneous subjects. 


CHEST OF OAK AND PINE, circa 1700 


With panelled drawers, original brasses. 


TWO DOLLS OF WAX, circa 1790 
Brought to Sarah Livingston of New York, later the wife of 
Chief Justice Jay. 


PINK LUSTRE TEA SET, 26 pieces Owner, Mr. B. F. W. Russell 


FIRE BUCKET USED IN THE BOSTON 
FIRE Owner, Mrs. William Whitman, Jr. 


ARTICLES 1122-1131 ADDITIONAL GLASS 


Loaned by W. G. R. Allen 
PAIR OF STIEGEL SALTS 
Amethyst. Height 214”. Diamond pattern. 


SMALL STIEGEL FLOWER VASE. 
Amethyst. Height 614”. Sunken panel design. 


STIEGEL TOILET BOTTLE 
Amethyst. Height 5”. Daisy in diamond pattern. 


BOWL OF SOUTH JERSEY GLASS 
Sapphire blue. Height 334”. Crimped foot. 


SALT OF SOUTH JERSEY GLASS 
Sea green. Height 134”. Redipped and tooled. 


PITCHER OF SOUTH JERSEY GLASS. 
Sea green. Height 434”. Twisted spiral and crimped foot. 


1128 FLAT POCKET FLASK OF THREE-SECTION-MOULD GLASS 
Sea Green. Height 8”. Hobnail and ribbed pattern. 


1129 POCKET FLASK 
Light green. Height 6%”. Stiegel type diamond pattern. 


1130 CHILD’S TOY OF SOUTH JERSEY GLASS 
Light green. Height 414”. Bird on baluster standard. 


1131 PITCHER OF CONNECTICUT VALLEY GLASS 
Amber brown. Height 544”. Redipped and tooled. 


ARTICLES 1133-1147 ADDITIONAL GLASS 
Loaned by Mrs. John C, Spring 
1133 STEIGEL BOTTLE 
Purple, 634” high. 


1134 PITKIN BOTTLE 
Brown, 614” high. 


1135 PITKIN BOTTLE 
Olive green, 614” high. 


1136 PITKIN BOTTLE 
Green, 614” wide. 


1137 PITKIN BOTTLE 
Light green, 7” high 


1138 BOTTLE OF THREE-SECTION MOLD 
Blue, 5 qjw” high. 


1139 PITCHER OF STEIGEL 
Blue, 224” high. 


1140 PITCHER 
Blue, 3” high. 


1141 EARLY BOTTLE 
Blue rope pattern, 314” high. 


1142 PITKIN BOTTLE 
Green, 6%” high. 


1143 BOWL OF SOUTH JERSEY GLASS 


Blue, 11” diameter. 


1144 LAMP ON STANDARD 
Blue, 534” high. 


1145 LAMP 
Blue and white, 514” high. 


1146 LIVERPOOL PITCHER 
Boston Frigate, 10” high. 


1147, DECANTER OF THREE-MOLD GLASS 
10%” high. 


1148 SILVER TANKARD Owner, Mr. Frank H. Walker 
With midband-dome top. 
By Jacob Hurd 1702-1758 


1149 CANDLE STAND OF PINE Owner, Mr. Henry D. Sleeper 
With adjustable tray. 


*1150 SMALL CHEST OF DRAWERS e 
With five turned legs. 





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MISS CAREY 
85 CHESTNUT STREET 
BOSTON 


Antiques and Decoration 


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